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834 Tipsfor Successful
Online Instruction
Produced by Sponsored by
I. How to Use These Tips . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .3A. Introduction . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .3
II. Tips for Instructors . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .5A. Prepare thoroughly for facilitating synchronous events . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .5
A. IntroductionIn early 2005 The eLearning Guild conducted a survey of its members on the subject of
Synchronous Instruction. A total of 644 members responded to the questionnaire. The last questionin the questionnaire asked members who have online instruction experience to list their favoritetips to share with other online instructors; a remarkable total of 336 members contributed usabletips.
As might be expected the tips ranged from a single word (Plan! or Practice!) to as many as fifteenseparate tips running over 350 words! They also ranged from the simple and obvious to the unusualand subtle. They covered the complete gamut of behavior for an online instructor. We are providingthese tips to everybody who is interested in being more effective at doing online synchronousinstruction.
The raw list of tips was overwhelming, so we examined several schemes for categorizing them,none of which worked very well. Finally, we decided to let the tips fall into more or less natural cate-gories as suggested by the tips themselves. Most of the categories relate to functional roles: instruc-tor, manager, and design and development team. The remainder gives more generic advice aboutimplementation and miscellaneous matters. Many tips clearly fall into a specific category, but wecould equally well place a large number of tips into several different categories. We put them wherewe thought they fit best, knowing full well that people may disagree with us.
The vast majority of the tips apply to the online instructor. This seems wholly appropriate. At thesame time, we believe that everyone concerned with synchronous e-Learning will benefit by readingthrough all the tips. There is repetition and overlap between the tips, and we left things that way sothat the reader could judge (without our editorializing) how much emphasis practitioners placed onthe various aspects of synchronous e-Learning.
We have devised a way to credit the members who contributed the tips (the Tipsters). We followmost tips with a number indicating who contributed it, and an indexed list of Tipsters appears at theend of this book. Note that a few numbers are missing from the index, and that some members didnot provide their names when doing the survey so there are a few tips without numbers. All tips arein the Tipster’s own words, with editing only for spelling, grammar, and punctuation.
We deeply appreciate the effort that contributors made to create these tips. We hope you find atleast one valuable idea — and, hopefully, many valuable ideas — that can help you when doingonline instruction.
834 Tips for Successful Online Instruction | 3
I. How to Use These Tips
Published December 2005 by The eLearning Guild
Bill [email protected]
Karen HyderContent [email protected]
Chuck HolcombeCopy [email protected]
FREE Digital eBookThe content of this digitaleBook is FREE and in thepublic domain. You areencouraged to use it, shareit, post it on your Web siteand/or your organization’sIntranet. No one is author-ized to charge a fee for it orto use it to collect contactdata. The PDF file cannot bealtered without written per-mission from The eLearningGuild.We request that reuseor re-distribution of thispublication is accompaniedby appropriate attribution toThe eLearning Guild whichcan be found on the Web atwww. eLearningGuild.com
This FREE Digital Book would not have been possible were it notfor a generous contribution to its development from WebExCommunications. If you’re not familiar with WebEx products foronline meetings and synchronous e-Learning, or if you haven’tchecked them out lately, we encourage you to take a look at yourearliest convenience! www.webex.com
HAVE FUN! — 105
Expect it to be more work than a traditional course, because it probably will be. — 40
Do not expect to be successful at this because you are a good live classroom trainer. Seek out suc-cessful e-Trainers for advice. Look for good professional training. Schools and experience in the livetraining area is not sufficient preparation for e-Training. — 14
Whenever possible, make the transition from classroom to online instruction incrementally, overtime, monitoring and adjusting as you go. — 287
Subscribe to newsletters geared toward online designers and developers (e.g., eLearning Guide,Online News and Reviews, etc.); stay connected with other professionals in the field. — 25
You should have (or build) your confidence, both in the system, and in your ability to deal with anunseen group. — 160
Have good documentation regarding the hardware setup; and software knowledge and interperson-al skills needed to teach effectively. — 163
Be prepared to receive and immediately respond to vast amount of email from your students. — 191
Jolt Cola, king-size Snickers, and mighty wrists to avoid RSI from typing for hours on end each day.— 196
Be prepared with course notes, instructor’s guide, knowledge of participants, i.e. ethnic and culturalbackgrounds, formal education, entry level knowledge of the topic being taught, etc. — 223
My favorite tip would be to stay organized in order to stay ahead of the presentation curve. — 239
You need to have first-hand experience. — 313
You must know the online teaching process inside and out. — 328
A. Prepare thoroughly for facilitating synchronous events1. Be familiar with the software, tools and technology
Get very comfortable with the technology. (Know what you’re doing!) — 105
Know how to use your virtual classroom software. — 3
Learn your technology tool and practice!! — 15
Be familiar with the presentation platform tools. — 260
Know the delivery tool and don’t learn how to use it during a live event. — 18
Develop proficiency in navigating the technology used within the environment. — 37
834 Tips for Successful Online Instruction | 5
This is not aneasy transitionfor instructors.Even the mostseasonedinstructorshave a very difficult timetransitioning to online teaching.
Madeline Usera,Project Manager,
LearningTechnologies, ATF
(government)
II. Tips for Instructors
Know the technology you are using! Be very comfortable with it — it will make your life easier andstudents will rely on you for assistance. — 94
Use ALL the tools provided by Centra (or WebEx, Placeware, etc) to make up for the lack of a physicalpresence to keep the students’ attention. — 100
Understand and practice with any tool (WebEx, Centra) with a willing test student until the controlsare familiar. — 111
LEARN THE TECHNOLOGY!!! — 88
Solve any PC skill or technology issues before you start. — 190
Prepare. Prepare. Prepare. Be as familiar with your electronic tools as possible, so their use by thetrainer is as transparent to the online instruction process as is the use of a whiteboard in a class-room. — 267
2. Be prepared to teach in the online medium(See section II.B.2 on content delivery for additional tips.)
Know your medium before you set out to teach in it. — 216
You have to be an expert with the virtual classroom technology. — 55
The online instructor has to acquire the kind of necessary knowledge and understanding about newmedia so you can apply it to the content being both taught and learned. — 195
Know your tools — be familiar enough with the technology so you can focus on your content andyour learners / participants. — 215
Know your tool — many times I’ve attended sessions where virtual facilitators did not have a goodcommand of the tool they were using and/or did not take students through the tool to explainthings. — 133
Know and use your online toolbox. Make your virtual classroom a “tangible” thing. — 165
Learn to use the tools such as highlighters, pointers etc. — 188
Develop the ability to multi-task as you need to watch for raised hands, text chat, etc. as you aretalking. — 138
Don’t be intimidated by the technologies. — 42
Know how to use the technology well. — 46
Understand the zillions of capabilities of the technology. — 49
Learn and use the tools provided by your product. — 220
Preparation is the key! Prior to your training, TEST the technology being used. Go through the stepsin logging in, connecting etc. Ensure that your PC has the proper plug-ins etc. — 266
834 Tips for Successful Online Instruction | 6
Become familiarwith the fea-tures of yoursynchronousproduct and usethem! Some are“better” thanwhat you get inF2F (polling,chat questions,shared white-boards, etc.). Ifyou don’t usethem, neitherwill the stu-dents.
Bob Joyce, Coordinatorof Continuing Ed.,
Center for Biosecurity& Public Health
Preparedness
II. Tips for Instructors continued
Use the tools that are available in any application you use to distribute learning. — 322
Use tools like Mallard or CAPA. Use simulations. Use a tool like CollabSS. — 323
Utilize all interactive tools available in the specific learning environment (polls, click on screen, typeon screen, chat, etc). — 327
Never expect an online student to be able to do something in the online program which you as aninstructor cannot do yourself. — 328
Use the whiteboard features in PowerPoint presentations. You can’t physically point to the screen asyou would in a face-to-face session, so I find it helpful when online presenters use the whiteboardmarkup features to highlight or point out items in their slides. — 336
3. Know the content
Check the accuracy of the content material. — 271
Make sure you are extremely knowledgeable about your content, and have prepared a set of out-comes for where you want to lead the group. — 230
Try to look at your own classes as a student sees them; then ask yourself if you would want to takethis class. — 280
Check out your material and teach to that format. — 243
Be prepared at all times. Know what you are going to teach, how you are going to teach it, and howmuch time it will take. — 46
Know the content well. — 46
Know your material. — 131
Know your subject matter. — 218
Know your subject. — 159
Know your material inside out. — 259
4. Develop a “Plan B”
Plan for the unexpected. — 105
Prepare for the unexpected — redundant phone lines, computer consoles, etc. are key to successfulevents. If one goes down, the show must still go on, so having extras is always a good thing. — 133
Build a trainer’s guide that tells you how to deal with typical things that can go wrong during apresentation. That way you have a resource to smoothly deal with issues as they arise, without giv-ing the appearance of helplessness. — 18
834 Tips for Successful Online Instruction | 7
Know your con-tent, exercises,and activitiesexplicitly foreach class ses-sion. Test allexercises andactivities, etc.,prior to sendingthem out toeveryone — andif computer-based, test on acomputer otherthan the one onwhich you creat-ed them.
Dan Hill, Manager,Training & Education,
Group HealthCooperative
II. Tips for Instructors continued
Have a backup plan in case something goes wrong with plan A, especially for synchronous training.(For example, if I plan to do a live demo of a business application; what am I going to do if thatapplication goes down during the training? I need a backup plan. A PowerPoint slide set or avi/wmvfile that I created ahead of time that I can use in place of the live demo.) — 18
Have alternatives in place if the technology fails. Don’t allow one site with difficulties to bring downthe whole presentation. Hand them over to a help desk; find out if they can connect at another time,etc. — 217
Practice is just as important for online delivery as for classroom, if not more so. Awkward pauses inthe classroom are easier to remedy than strange pauses online. If you are having a technical prob-lem, simply explain the situation and either remedy it quickly or go immediately to Plan B (printedslides you provided, backup conference call number, etc). — 303
Avoid surprises by preparing thoroughly for each event. — 7
Have a “Plan B” and a “Plan C.” — 7
Have a backup plan should a certain tool not work. — 21
Anticipate possible issues on the access and learning obstacles and be ready to resolve, encourage,or re-direct where appropriate. — 35
Be prepared for anything. — 95
Be prepared with Plan B in case of technical difficulties. — 96
Have a Plan B in case technology goes awry. — 161
Be sure to have a Plan B because whatever can go wrong eventually will. — 215
5. Get some experience as a learner
Attend as many online courses as you can and keep a notebook of ideas. — 263
Take online classes so you know what you liked and didn’t like. — 296
Take an online course to experience the role of student. — 27
Become an online learner before you teach online. — 101
You must have been an online learner yourself. — 167
Make sure you attend several online sessions yourself to see what’s good and bad in others. — 231
Take some online credit classes in a brand new field. — 293
Go through the courseware from a user’s perspective. — 271
834 Tips for Successful Online Instruction | 8
Always have aPlan B.
Barbara Fillicaro
II. Tips for Instructors continued
Read all assignment descriptions as though you are a student looking for a loophole in a vaguedeadline or project requirement. — 272
Be a good participant — know what it is like to participate, and identify when you are engaged, andbored, as a participant. — 9
6. Plan, prepare, practice
Practice — practice — practice! (Know your content!) — 105
Knowledge of the environment: — 271 1. Computer literacy: the basics of how to deal with typical computer issues.2. Networking basics: minimum understanding of the issues involved with transmitting over theinternet (e.g., lag time, presenter / learner resolution differences, etc.).3. Know your platform: overview of common features in virtual classroom platforms.
Principles of online presentation: — 271 1. Speaking: emphasis on energy, pacing, diction, and tonal variation.2. Listening: active listening skills, both aural and written (e.g., chat messages).
Before the Meeting — Attend an online presenter’s workshop or complete an online tutorial.Develop an outline of your meeting, with a script or notes of what you’re going to say. Make yourmeeting interactive, engaging the participants and requiring them to respond to you, the content, oreach other. Keeping your virtual meeting or classroom interactive helps the participants to stayfocused and tuned in. Build interactive techniques into your presentation. Build well-designed slides.Have someone proofread your slides. Practice, practice, practice! Hold a practice or test meeting andrun through the presentation with a colleague. Reserve a conference bridge for the audio portion ofyour web meeting. Send out invitations for the meeting to participants. Send copies of slide presen-tations to participants before the meeting in case you run into technical problems. Locate a sitewhere you can conduct your web meeting away from noise and distractions. Using an office or roomwith a door is ideal as it will eliminate background noise and minimize interruptions. Print the DoNot Disturb sign and post it on your door or cubicle. Be organized with your notes, as shuffling andrustling papers can be annoying to others and doesn’t lend itself to a professional delivery. — 307
Have a plan for delivery and stick to it. This should include a script and a timeline. — 18
Plan well. — 254
Plan, plan, plan. — 27, 255
Before giving the session PRACTICE! PRACTICE! PRACTICE! — 21
Rehearse — you really don’t know what the graphics will look like to your learners until you trythem. Also, if you’re going to application-share make sure you try it with co-workers before you try iton learners. That way you know what the learner’s experience will be. — 3
Practice first, preferably with a test audience. — 24
834 Tips for Successful Online Instruction | 9
Keep proper bal-ance betweenthe presentationand the content.Allocate conven-ient time table.
Satish Ingale, PL, HSBC
II. Tips for Instructors continued
Practice in front of 2 machines — one the leader and the other the participant so you can see thecause and effect between the two. — 9
Practice giving your course with a colleague behind a partition or over the phone. — 28
Be prepared. — 93
Be prepared for a lot of writing! — 94
Rehearse well enough that you do not need to read the material word for word. — 56
Preparation. 2. Preparation. 3. Preparation. — 32
Practice, practice, practice. — 161, 177, 215, 262, 263
Practice, practice, practice — too many times facilitators don’t practice enough for the virtual envi-ronment. In a traditional classroom, many folks can “wing it,” but in the virtual environment it’smuch harder to do that. — 133
Practice — revise — practice — revise — practice. — 190
Practice your presentation delivery. — 260
Rehearse with an audience. — 275
Rehearse!!! Also, if recording the session, record your rehearsal.... recorded sessions are usually veryboring, but a mocked-up session can be controlled to keep a learner’s interest. — 276
Rehearsal and small group tryout are essential. — 188
Rehearse any areas where you will be giving a demonstration. — 223
PRACTICE! — 261
Test drive your course on co-workers before presenting it to students. — 263
Preparation and practice before facilitating the class or course. — 264
Preparation is the key for a successful online course. Just as it is for a classroom course. — 265
PRACTICE before you go live. — 259
Practice your lesson several times before presenting it live to your audience over the Web. Perhapspractice it with a friend or colleague from two computers. — 296
You can never be too prepared! — 335
834 Tips for Successful Online Instruction | 10
PLANNING —Your presenta-tion must bewell laid outand any ques-tions you wantto use as pollingquestionsshould be inte-grated into thecourse to moreeffectively useyour time andengage yourstudents.
Michael Shawn Stiles,Training Project
Manager, Pfizer Inc.
II. Tips for Instructors continued
J A N U A R Y 1 2 , 2 0 0 6
Intermediate Flash DevelopmentTechniques for e-Learning
J A N U A R Y 2 6 , 2 0 0 6
Advanced Flash DevelopmentTechniques for e-Learning
M A R C H 9 , 2 0 0 6
Instructional Design Strategies forSynchronous e-Learning
M A R C H 2 3 , 2 0 0 6
New Media Tools for DevelopingHigh-end e-Learning
M A Y 1 1 , 2 0 0 6
New Technologies for Building e-Learning Communities
M A Y 2 5 , 2 0 0 6
Incorporating Gaming Strategies ine-Learning
J U L Y 1 3 , 2 0 0 6
Costing Approaches for e-LearningDesign & Development
A U G U S T 1 0 , 2 0 0 6
LMS/LCMS Implementation &Management
S E P T E M B E R 1 4 , 2 0 0 6
Simulations for e-Learning
S E P T E M B E R 2 8 , 2 0 0 6
E-Learning Assessment,Measurement and Evaluation
O C T O B E R 2 6 , 2 0 0 6
Converting Classroom Content toe-Learning
N O V E M B E R 9 , 2 0 0 6
Converting PowerPoint Content toe-Learning
2006 Online Forums Schedule
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Join the Guild as a Member Plusand you can participate in all 36Online Forum sessions in 2006 —in addition you will have access tothe Guild’s Online Event Archivewhere you’ll find recordings ofhundreds of past sessions.
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7. Know your learners
Know your students and what the needs of the trainees are. — 33
Understand the audience profile and the challenges they face in this course. — 39
Understand who your learners are. — 46
Get to know your students. Just as you would have an initial interview in a face-to-face setting, youmust be able to have that kind of interview online, and be able to know who your students are. Keepit professional, but light. The students should feel comfortable with your abilities after the interview,and you should have a good idea of the abilities of the students. — 156
Know your audience so that you can design in appropriate questions and interactions — 215
Know your participants’ names and use them! — 217
Think outside the box — see issues from the student’s point of view. — 159
Ensure that content is fresh and relevant to their needs. — 153
Be aware of what your learners might not be aware of. — 104
Plan the course carefully and make sure that it has enough flexibility — this allows you to take yourtime during the course for actually getting in touch with students, understanding them, and build-ing trust. — 252
Teach to your learner. Find out how they like to learn and adjust accordingly. Just because you areteaching online, your style doesn’t have to be set in stone. — 295
Remember that on-line is not the same as page turning. You can make no assumptions about whatthe learner already knows of the topic. — 278
I would identify that the ability for the online instructor to customize and develop his or her ownmaterials is essential. This means instructors can create content that is special to the needs of thosethey are training. With e-Learning the potential to do this is immense and should not be overlooked.— 325
Understand cultural issues (dealing with a potentially wider student-base).
B. Ensure an effective deliveryAlways have an “icebreaker” question or text on the screen during session logins. — 65
Always provide paper-based resources as a student reference to back up your training. — 67
Always think of the students’ needs. — 70
834 Tips for Successful Online Instruction | 12
First and fore-most — knowyour audience!Wrap yourlearning ele-ments in a con-text that will be meaningfulto them.
Jeff Albers, SeniorTechnical Writer,
Mirant
II. Tips for Instructors continued
Apply the relationship between text, sound, motion and graphics. Think about what you are doing,how students use the on-line environment, and how to foster learning. Then apply your teachingtechniques and learn from student learning. — 73
Develop a routine to manage your online course effectively. — 84
Include 15-minute pre- and post-studies, job aides, or other media. — 190
Icebreakers. — 213
1. Get started on the right foot
Allow registration and setup time before the class commences. — 2
Open the e-Meeting Room early. — 49
If there are special pages of other documents like word, PDF, etc., have it turned to the page youwant to show in the e-Seminar before attendees sign in. — 49
Log in as the leader 1 — 2 days before and again 1 hour before the event. — 7
It is critical to test and ensure that technology issues are dealt with prior to the course commence-ment. — 67
Set up your room (on-line) hours before the class starts. — 232
Show up early and test the system to be sure all systems are functioning properly. — 283
Use a pre-live checklist. — 262
Have two computers logged on to understand and see what happens on participant’s computers.— 44
If at all possible, especially if you are a one-person group, have a second computer available so youcan see exactly what the participants see, e.g. lag time from your click to their screens. — 177
If possible, have a second computer logged on as a student, so you can see what the students areseeing. — 178
Make sure you have a Shadow Computer. — 232
Utilize two computers (one hooked up to the internet simulating the student with the slowest inter-net connection). — 164
834 Tips for Successful Online Instruction | 13
While waitingfor the event tobegin, have aslide with a mapof the countryand let peoplemark the areathey are attend-ing from.
Barbara Toney, AISApplication ServicesManager, UniGroup
II. Tips for Instructors continued
a. Visualize the learners
Slow down and imagine the audience in front of you. — 53
If you are active in the class, students are more likely to take an active role. — 94
Since there’s no eye contact and oftentimes limited feedback, I always placed a large poster of aclassroom setting in front of the instructor. It seemed to ease the transition a little. — 169
Face-to-face contact is a must somewhere in the program, if not for each session. — 191
Put a picture of a group of people up next to the monitor so you can see the students you are speak-ing to and talk with your hands. Although the students will not see the non-verbal movements, thetrainer’s delivery will be smoother because it will be natural. — 273
Visualize the audience in your mind. — 329
Visualize the people you are speaking to: they are not abstract. They are real people who deserveyour top effort. — 330
b. Prepare the learners for success in the synchronous environment
Establish the meeting ground rules: Expectations and guidelines. How and when you’ll take ques-tions. Time frames. Etiquette reminders. — 307
Use a multiple-choice (check all that apply) tech poll to do a quality check on the video and audio atthe start of the presentation. — 154
Introduce learners to the interface with a quick synchronous session or a recorded asynchronoussession a week prior to the training session. — 306
Keep the learners active on their end through making them raise their hand, click the answer to aquestion, poll, etc. — 306
Encourage the learners to applaud, laugh, joke using the interface. — 306
Make sure that your students understand and feel comfortable with the technical media beingused; don’t assume a level of comfort or understanding that may not be there. — 25
Regardless of the online media, clearly state expectations, objectives, tool functionality, etc. of allonline instruction so everyone begins on the same page, understands how to operate any tools, andknows what to expect. — 25
Provide online office hours and phone appointments. — 27
Use a printed handbook for learners to write notes, do assignments, and stay engaged. — 36
Send out ideas and tips on “How to Learn.” — 39
834 Tips for Successful Online Instruction | 14
Before present-ing, put a pic-ture of a person(a representa-tive student) onthe side of yourcomputer moni-tor and talk tothat student.
Tom Berry, GalileoSystems, LLC
II. Tips for Instructors continued
Provide students with a download of the workshop contents. — 43
Remind students that “online” does not equal “easier learning.” — 45
Let students know exactly how the online class will work. Let them know who they can contact ifthey have technical questions, etc. — 46
Clearly define both student and instructor expectations. — 54
Set clear expectations. Use a syllabus or outline to manage student expectations about yourresponse time for individual emails, and define student participation so that students know there isa reward for quality as well as for a minimum number of postings, and as much for their responsesto classmates as to you. — 57
Send out lots of preparation information to make sure attendees are comfortable in their environ-ment. — 74
Be explicit about what your expectations are concerning participation. — 87
If this is an ongoing course, create a participation metric and let the students know what it is andhow it impacts their grade. — 87
State your expectations up front. — 81
Develop a policy for students to follow. — 84
Classroom etiquette for participants: — 1121. Close other open applications (especially Outlook) for resource reasons.2. Set phones to forward calls directly to voicemail (only if using voice-over IP (VOIP).3. Keep telephone on “mute” when not speaking (only if using teleconference feature).4. Hang a “Do Not Disturb” sign outside your cube / office.5. Use the “yes”,“no”, and hand-raise icons to participate and indicate there is a question or com-
ment.
Provide support, particularly to new learners. — 92
Make sure the learners understand technology and can demonstrate the ability to use it before theybegin to use online learning. — 109
I’ve been a student in an online course. A tip from this experience would be to know the limits ofthe system they are using. Clearly state what the student will be doing, in my class it was a ton ofwriting — which is not bad, it was just a bit of a surprise. — 108
Ensure that there is a regular expectation for course meetings during a regularly defined semesteror quarter. — 143
Require learner participation within a set time period; too much time between hearing from learn-ers creates its own problems. — 143
834 Tips for Successful Online Instruction | 15
Set a FAQ pageand an “I have a question”DiscussionForum wherestudents can askother studentsfor help on anyclass issue.“Land of theLost” forumsalso function inthe same way.
Stevie Daniels,Coordinator Academic
Computing, Fresno CityCollege
II. Tips for Instructors continued
Give specific guidelines for message board posts, with points assigned for meeting the criteria.— 157
Manage expectations. Ensure learners know timetables, performance expectations, participationexpectations ... etc. — 167
Provide a comprehensive syllabus to include a course description, objectives, and grading rubric.— 147
Send out tip sheet in advance of session. — 153
Set ground rules (close down all other applications, create a protected learning space). — 262
Set parameters for your online instruction early; e.g. computer use guidelines, instructor availability,online etiquette, addressing email properly so filters can be in place, etc. — 282
c. Include a round of introductions
Get personalized with the students. — 271
Create a nurturing environment by providing opportunities for the students to get to know you andeach other. — 27
Don’t dispense with the introductions in this format if the number of learners is manageable. Thetechnology allows it. This is a good way to help build the class spirit. — 30
Get your participants talking to you, and to each other. — 34
Ask students to provide a short bio and optional photo to include on your site. Show pictures of stu-dents on a map to show where the students are from. — 77
Allow time at the beginning of an extended course to allow students to get to know each otheronline. — 157
If the class size permits it, have people introduce themselves. — 329
d. Help learners develop media literacy
Allow time for initial online sessions and practice with the technology in advance. — 63
If online learning is new to the people you are training, spend some time helping them learn how touse the equipment or programs or whatever. Otherwise this can be a stopper to the learning. — 109
Don’t assume that the trainer and student are on the same level with the technology. — 124
Don’t assume that the “e” part of e-Learning won’t confuse students. Don’t frighten off those olderstudents who may feel out of touch with “electrickery.” — 127
834 Tips for Successful Online Instruction | 16
Establish clearexpectations atthe beginning of the course.Include expec-tations forresponse toemail, howoften studentsmust log in tothe course, howdiscussions willbe graded, etc.
Caryl Bender, Directorof Instructional
Technology, Collegis /Brookdale Community
College
II. Tips for Instructors continued
From the WebEx Training Center Team
12 Tips for More Effective Virtual Classrooms Before the training session…
1. Use what you’ve got a. Don’t recreate the wheel – use the material you have.
b. Don’t convert or change formats unless absolutely necessary. Your virtual classroom solution should allow you to present your content in its native format.
2. Narrow your focus a. “Chunk up” your content – the shorter you can make it, the better.
b. Try to limit online sessions to 1 hour whenever possible.
c. Smaller classes are easier to manage – 10 to 20 learners max.
d. Supplement the online session with job aids such as hand-outs, recorded content, reference guides, etc.
3. Look for every opportunity to engage your audience a. Use Q&A, Chat, Polls, White-boarding and other interactive tools to keep
people involved.
b. Cover no more than 4 slides without an interaction.
c. Get personal – Involve individual learners whenever you can.
4. Practice, Practice, Practice a. Master the techniques & the technology.
b. Use 2 computers for both practice sessions and actual sessions to see (and experience) what your audience sees.
5. Automate registration and reporting a. Use your virtual classroom’s registration function to automatically capture
a record of who attended training sessions.
b. Collect poll and test results for assessment and analysis.
6. “Can” what you can a. Record static content and post for on-demand viewing.
b. Offer live sessions for material that needs context and interaction.
From the WebEx Training Center Team
12 Tips for More Effective Virtual Classrooms
During the training session…
7. Partner with a colleague a. Another presenter adds interactivity and helps manage the class.
b. Additional Panelist can monitor Text Chat and Q&A.
8. Set the stage a. Start with a 5 minute intro to familiarize attendees with environment.
b. Focus on how to participate (chat, Q&A, raise hand, audio, etc.)
9. Keep it simple a. Avoid “dense” material such as intricate charts or lengthy spreadsheets
within a slide.
b. Keep it short & sweet: Limit your talk time to < 5 minutes per slide.
c. Use videos and animations sparingly.
10. Record for review and reuse a. Record the session to post for those unable to attend.
b. Save whiteboards, annotated documents for distribution and review.
After the training session…
11. Follow-up for follow-through a. Don’t assume your audience “got” what you taught – ask them! Use e-
mails, surveys, polls or phone calls to follow-up.
b. Provide opportunities for questions or coaching after the session.
c. Schedule a follow-up session within 30 – 60 days to see if learning was applied.
12. Measure & market your successes a. Define success criteria & measure the results.
b. Capture quotes & success stories, and then publish them (newletters, emails, even in your next class announcement.)
c. Use your sessions to identify and recruit new SMEs & teachers.
From the WebEx Training Center Team
3 Critical Skills for Virtual Classroom Instructors First the good news! The skills you use everyday in traditional classrooms are equally valuable in the online environment. However, there are a few areas that need special focus when teaching a “virtual” class:
1. Energy! • Remember how bored you were the last time you sat in a class and listened to the
instructor drone on and on and on? Put that instructor in a virtual class environment and you can take that feeling and multiply it by a factor of 10.
• Make a conscious effort to put all of your energy, enthusiasm and excitement into your voice and let your learners know that this is a class worthy of their time and commitment.
• Action Item: Record your practice presentations. Ask a colleague to listen to the first 10 minutes and rate your energy on a scale of 1 (“Nap Time”) to 5 (“Showtime!”) Anything less than a 4 is cause for concern.
2. Brevity is a Virtue. • One great thing about virtual classes is that they enable your audience to gain a
learning experience right in the middle of their work day. Don’t dilute that benefit by trying to cram 4 hours of training into an already hectic schedule.
• Virtual classes are at their most effective when they are focused, brief (1 hour or less) and interactive. Ensuring that your classes meet these criteria requires work and discipline. Look for logical break points in your content and “chunk” it up into smaller, more focused segments.
• Action Item: Review your slides and pare down your information down to the core concepts you need to communicate. Work to shave your talk time to <5 minutes per slide (2 minutes to cover the core material and 3 minutes for context and depth.) Target 40 minutes of presentation for each class hour and dedicate the rest of the time to class interactions.
3. Focus on Interactions • In a virtual class, there is no way to ensure that your students aren’t playing solitaire,
catching up on email or even napping. How do you handle this?
• Use Q&A, Chat, Polls, White-boarding and other interactive tools to keep your learners engaged and involved. Look for opportunities to engage individual learners. And don’t forget to use audio conferencing for interactions whenever you can. A dynamic vocal discussion can really jump-start the learning process.
• Action Item: Place small, unobtrusive visual cues on your slides to remind you to engage your audience. Some instructors use a favorite icon such as a light bulb to let them know it is time to pause and ask a question or open the floor for discussion.
Put these 3 skills into practice & super-charge your virtual classroom experience!
Take a few minutes up front to walk people through the key features of the tool. — 215
In creating the Global SDM Training Strategy now in place at Ford Motor Company, our team foundthat there were numerous avenues of interaction that should be considered for implementation of ablended learning model. My tip would be to ensure that an instructor has verified that studentswith a tendency for participation in a single avenue are, at least, exposed to other tools during theircourse. For example: where email, chat and threaded discussions are commonly in use by most stu-dents; you may still find some have avoided learning what they need to function in one or more ofthese modes. A single exercise, or assignment, is not enough to ensure minimal competence. — 187
e. Present a professional image as the instructor
Typing skills: — 271
Patience: knowing when to keep your hands off the mouse.
Problem solving: what to do when it doesn’t work. — 271
Plan ahead: introduction, content sequence, interactions, practice sessions, summary / conclusion;technology set up and shake down; student access to instructor offline. — 251
If you’re using a headset, position it so the microphone is not directly by your mouth. This will helpthe volume be normal and eliminate the sound of heavy breathing. — 307
Eliminate fillers such as “uh,”“you know,” and “uh-huh” to improve the quality and professionalismof your presentation. — 307
Act professional! — 62
Always be on time. — 62
Rehearse often. — 62
Be proactive in thinking of new methods to make synchronous learning effective and engaging.— 62
Be accessible. — 80
Be adaptable to the customer. — 82
Be available to your students. — 83
Be courteous to students, no matter what. — 84
Attend to adult learning concepts. — 85
Be timely in your responses to class participants. — 91
834 Tips for Successful Online Instruction | 20
Have first-timelearners log in 15minutes prior toclass start andprovide themwith a tour ofthe technology,like how to usechat, raise theirhand, end thesession, etc.
Lisa Wieland Handy, AVP/ Sr. Consultant,
Mellon
II. Tips for Instructors continued
Be organized and keep up or ahead of the class. — 91
Be flexible. — 138
Manage your time wisely. — 114
Obey the rules of online instruction. — 243
Start on time from breaks (sound familiar?). — 310
f. Be proactive about the “housekeeping” details
Use audience feedback tools (such as changing seat colors in Microsoft Live Meeting) to get consen-sus for sound check and other yes/no type questions.“If you can hear me clearly, change your seatcolor to purple.” — 242
Keep your separate grade sheets offline with notes on assignments so that you can respond quicklyto private emails regarding grades, assignments, or feedback. — 91
2. Manage the main event: Content deliverya. Keep the learners engaged
Engagement: — 271 1. How (and when) to elicit interaction from students — through both technical and verbal means.2. Understand the differences between online and in-person student engagement.3. The increased availability of distracters.4. The openness afforded by anonymity.5. The safety of lurking.
Provide motivation, support, and feedback for discussions. Summarize responses; bring the discus-sion back on track. Encourage student-to-student interaction. Tap learners’ knowledge. Make stu-dents responsible for summarizing the week’s discussion. Teach others a concept. Assign group proj-ects. Arrange student’s role-plays. Use peer-review for projects. Motivate them to display their workpublicly. — 271
Call on by name. Listen to your yoice — your tone of voice should always be warm and friendly. Havea smile in your tone. To do this, you may want to place a small mirror on your computer monitor toobserve yourself. If you are frowning, so is your voice. Vary your voice inflection to avoid soundingmonotone. Be enthusiastic in your presentation. If you are energized and enthused about the infor-mation, your participants will be also. It will also be easier for them to stay tuned in. — 307
Interactivity is vital. — 191
Just like in the physical classroom, teachers need to be able to provide some “spark” — creating yourlessons and web pages in the summer with no further work during the year is “boring” for students!Adding something new, now and then, keeps students interested and asking “What is this instructorgoing to do next?” — 197
834 Tips for Successful Online Instruction | 21
Self-discipline isvital. An on-lineinstructor mustbe able to stayon schedule, andbe aware of stu-dents that arefalling behind orare not engag-ing.
James Genovese,President, Pro-Ware
Computing, Inc.
II. Tips for Instructors continued
Check for audience engagement every 3 to 5 minutes. — 306
MARKUP TOOLS / WHITEBOARD: — 1121. Use the Markup tools on slides to:
a) Focus participants’ attention.b) Add visual stimulation.c) Replace animation.d) Summarize what has been discussed.
2. Let participants add a drawing or a diagram when appropriate.3. Don’t allow too many participants to work at one time.4. Assign participants to different sections of the whiteboard to define the workspace.5. Save important markups to the Agenda.
Use the online tools appropriately to enhance the teaching and learning environment. — 35
Use the annotation tools (in WebEx, for both the instructor and learner) — 49
Have a video camera for personalizing the e-Seminar. — 49
Use tools such as a pointer, or draw on the slide, to engage interest. — 53
Clear the participant panel before each new question. — 112
Creatively use the features and functions of the synchronous classroom tool to engage participants— polling, marker tools, small group discussion via chat, etc. — 119
Use polling. — 90
Don’t be afraid to use the tool to its fullest. Use class breakouts, use the whiteboard and app shar-ing. If you don’t you will lose the class within 5 minutes no matter how “exciting” you think yourslides are. — 247
Have supporting materials and utilize as many tools as possible to enhance the learning experience.A lot of instructors only use PowerPoint and not application sharing, breakout rooms, surveys andchat capabilities. — 288
Try to engage the students every 5 minutes. — 21
Find ways to check in with your students in an on-line synchronous classroom by using the audiencefeature of the software. — 43
Periodically (every 5 — 10 minutes) engage the virtual audience, either by name or by an action suchas a polling slide. — 53
Check in with each attendee every 15 minutes. Ask a pointed question to a specific attendee. — 110
Elicit regular feedback (every 5 minutes minimum) to ensure student understanding.
Encourage participation by randomly calling on participants. — 137
834 Tips for Successful Online Instruction | 22
Keep your ses-sions interactiveenough thatclassroom man-agement is notever an issue.
Benjamin Kolt,Instructional Designer,
National CityCorporation
II. Tips for Instructors continued
Call on individuals for specific input every five minutes, or almost the entire group will be doingemail. — 107
Do not go longer than 10 minutes without engaging the audience in some discussion or interaction.One way sessions are not as effective and participants get distracted easier (they may be multi-task-ing). — 153
Include some type of interactivity for the learners every 5 minutes. — 161
Have your learners interact in some way about every 7 to 10 minutes. — 165
Don’t try and teach more than 5 minutes without some form of interactivity (solicit feedback oftenfrom audience). — 169
Insert interactions at least every three minutes. — 164
Don’t forget about the telephone. You can always have students call you or vice versa. Be sure tolearn how to use chat rooms and instant messaging. — 293
Pause to ask questions and encourage discussion at least every 5 minutes. — 320
Encourage very frequent student involvement. — 146
Plan an interaction every 5-10 minutes. — 262
Stay engaged. — 289
Don’t overdo participation in discussion threads, but don’t be invisible — there is a happy medium.— 27
Always initiate discussion ... never assume that because learners are not communicating via discus-sion forum or emails, that they are fine and that they are learning. — 66
Ensure all participants have some input to the lesson, wallflowers do not learn all that they could orshould. — 67
Initiate discussion, then guide from the side. — 81
If you use Discussion Boards, particularly with active discussions or larger classes, set expectationsfor students clearly and assign forum moderators (students who get extra credit for this) to serve asthe first person to call for help regarding that forum, and who write a weekly synopsis of theforum’s most active discussion points for you. This makes it much more possible that you can handlethe increase in work that can come when the use of discussion boards takes off. — 182
Always set up one forum on a discussion board that you name something like “Student Lounge.”Tell thestudents that they can use this forum to discuss any topic they would like — new car, movie, a greatparty, etc.This gives them a place to “meet” with classmates informally, discuss common interests, and,therefore, makes it more likely that they will stay on topic in the subject-based forums. — 182
834 Tips for Successful Online Instruction | 23
Scan your inter-face in a clock-wise fashion —once each slidetransition — tocheck for ques-tions or com-ments.
Susan Gawley,eLearning Manager,
Deloitte & Touche
II. Tips for Instructors continued
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Require discussions with peers and the instructor to synthesize and ask additional questions to pro-mote “discovery” learning. — 143
Use a blank PowerPoint slide or a white board slide to type topics brought up in discussions. Forsmall groups, divide the slide into a tic tac toe type board and give each person their own area to listtheir ideas, and then discuss them. — 242
Consider chat vs. threaded discussion. Asynchronous threaded discussions have tremendous instruc-tional potential and value. Chat does not. A “café” discussion thread dedicated to off-task interactionbetter serves its social function. The pseudo-instructional value of chat can more efficiently andeffectively be accomplished with a phone call. — 287
If you have print-based materials and tasks that are working for you, you don’t always have torewrite them. Get them distributed, and then engage your students in excellent and focused thread-ed discussions. Consider the powerful potential uses of attachments. Simple, yet effective! — 287
WebCT Discussion Board Ideas & Information: Asynchronous discussion boards allow learners tocomplete reading assignments, reflect on their contributions, and construct a well-prepared contri-bution before posting to the discussion forum. Asynchronous discussion is one of the key compo-nents in interactivity for courses taught online or totally at a distance. The idea is to build a learningcommunity. Set up course discussion protocol: Explain what a threaded discussion is and how topost. Post, reply, quote, etc. Even distribution of postings (timeliness). Length of postings. Respond tomain question(s). Cite readings frequently. Respond to others. Bring in related prior knowledge andexperience. Use proper etiquette. Begin with an ice breaker. Main forum area of WebCT: Ask stu-dents to post bios (do yours first). Ask students to comment on syllabus or other issues of concern.Respond to various bios, acknowledging student’s contributions and emphasizing the richness anddiversity their backgrounds and experiences will bring to this course (get them to buy into it). Play agame: Have students mention 3 things about themselves, 2 true things and an untruth. Then havepeople guess which one is the untruth. Model one “real” discussion that is based on first or secondweek’s reading assignment. Emphasize that this will NOT be graded. Emphasize that everyoneshould contribute. Develop protocol. Follow the protocols. Acknowledge and encourage. Provide asynthesis of the discussion in class. What did we learn? Emerging issues? Grading: Discussion mustbe part of the grade (follow required student outcomes in your Syllabus). Determine how manyonline discussions you’ll have during semester. Assign a facilitator(s). Facilitators are required to leadonline discussion. Provide begin and end times. Determine group size. Provide a separate forum areafor each discussion. Integrate readings and projects into discussion. Set guidelines (protocol) andexplain or demonstrate how they work. Model at least one discussion. Monitor your students: pro-vide assistance. Provide frequent feedback. Acknowledge and encourage: refer to forum discussionsin future lessons. Evaluate student discussion: Make changes as necessary. Criteria for evaluatingthe quality of a discussion message, a good message is: Substantial (relates to the course material).Concise (one screen may be the ideal message length). Provocative (encourages others to respond).Interpretive (expands concepts or connects ideas in new ways). Timely (occurs in a reasonable timeframe — when the topic is under discussion). Logical (supports point of view with reasons and evi-dence). Grammatically correct (is well written). Only those comments that meet these criteria of agood message receive full credit. — 332
You can’t just do your F2F methods in the online. Get students “speaking” in the discussion boardand your email inbox will not be so full. — 335
834 Tips for Successful Online Instruction | 25
Be sure toinvolve eachstudent individ-ually in someway during thesession.
Jeff Tyson, Manager ofMultimedia
Development, TechResource Group, Inc.
II. Tips for Instructors continued
Trust your instincts. Try to get a read for the group about how much facilitator intervention theyneed, as in an ideal group dynamic they should only need guidance not regular intervention. — 11
Use other voices to teach and lead — both planned and on the fly — the art of letting students go— true learner-centric learning ... by breaking up topic. — 12
Write clearly and concisely. — 13
Don’t forget that discussion is a form of interaction ... it doesn’t have to just be interactions createdwithin your synchronous technology tool. Be creative! — 15
Focus on the student’s / participant’s needs and not on the content or the tool. — 17
Be clear about the session’s objectives. — 17
Encourage or require group interaction — this will help alleviate feelings of anxiety caused by theisolation of learning online. But be very aware of possible group interaction problems ... and inter-cede when absolutely necessary. — 27
Encourage participation in course daily by stimulating further discussions. — 37
Include interaction — between everyone plus the community or environment of the subject. — 38
Communicate with students clearly and regularly. — 40
Vary delivery methods to spark interest. — 42
Provide timely and meaningful feedback to learners. — 42
Promote online debate. — 45
Make every student feel as though they are a valuable contributor to the learning experience. — 54
Instructor should be accessible at various times. Some students may be from a foreign country andin a different time zone. — 60
It is difficult sometimes, but I feel it is important for the instructor to be available for chat as well asemail for the students. — 60
Acknowledge every contribution as far as possible, even if just “Thanks, name.” — 61
When asking for responses, make sure you pause long enough for participants to respond. — 15
Periodically, ask questions and invite thoughts from the students. — 17
Keep the adult learning model in mind: encourage your participants to add case studies, experi-ences, and electronic resources on the training topic. — 22
Address learners by name so that they feel a personal connection to the instructor. — 23
834 Tips for Successful Online Instruction | 26
Use polls to getdiscussion goingwhen needed.Most people willrespond to apoll.
Dr. Diane Kramer, CEO,PeakSkills Learning
Systems
II. Tips for Instructors continued
Provide success within the program. — 33
Stay close to the computer. — 38
Be available by phone, fax, email, IM, etc. — 38
Call those students who are not showing up in print. — 38
Be Proactive. — 39
Ensure you are always active and positive in the discussion forums. — 39
Keep contact alive. The worst thing is to let student’s motivation go down by disappearing. Emailstudents as often as possible, post interesting articles, spread news on the subject (via email, discus-sion forum). — 45
Be interested in each of your students. Read all their emails. Ask them how they are doing. Go fur-ther than just the perceived academic performance. — 45
Give constant feedback. — 45
Be prompt with your email responses, be prompt to synchronous discussions, and review youremails and discussion board postings every day. — 46
Make sure you ask your audience to give you feedback — and then respond to it. — 47
Utilize your questioning skills in a variety of ways, rather than over-utilizing polling and subsequent-ly diminishing the polling excellence. — 49
Set “office hours” and ensure you are able to promptly respond to inquiries. — 54
Recognize that few students may have sufficient (communication) bandwidth. — 54
Visualize the participants both as individuals and a group — keep this picture in mind as you work.— 55
Be visible in your online classroom. Make frequent appearances in the classroom, every day or everyother day, rather than concentrating all your activity into a few weekly work sessions. — 57
Divert separate email correspondence into the shared classroom venue. — 57
Communicate, Communicate, Communicate. — 57
Include the participants, sharing the microphone as much as possible, keeping clear objectives inmind. — 58
Ask lots of questions — use the polling feature, or whichever other options are available to keeppeople involved and interested. It’s not that different from classroom training! — 77
834 Tips for Successful Online Instruction | 27
Always listencarefully to the“One” source ofa question, butalways answerto all — byrephrasing, andbringing a ques-tion to a generalinterest levelmost of thetime. A dialoguebetween onlythe instructorand a partici-pant leaves theothers free to“leave.”
Francois Ronai,Consultant, Perfoption
Inc.
II. Tips for Instructors continued
Arrive early and greet your attendees when they arrive in the room. — 74
Don’t be afraid of silence. Pause to allow others to respond. — 126
Silence is deadly ... like dead air on a radio station. It’s easy to lose your audience so keep the sessioninteractive. — 284
Be able to connect with the learners and be able to facilitate the discussions of the group. — 81
Be creative and keep your e-Learning sessions lively. — 86
Let them participate, involve the learner so that they will learn and remember. Make it easy for themto come back to learn something new or something over again. — 109
Keep class interactive. — 90
Engage the learners by raising their curiosity and encouraging full participation. Be inclusive andseek out diverse views and different ways of looking at things or solutions. — 140
Engage the learners in the learning experience. Don’t just let them sit there. — 141
Engage your learners by asking questions! — 142
Make the session fun, challenging, and have valuable prizes (Dollar store...). — 164
For online learning events that are Web-based self-study, remember to have tests for understandingevery four to five screens. This will keep the participants involved in the learning process. — 179
Involve the audience to keep them from multi-tasking! — 192
Keep people involved. Ask for participation. Initiate participation. Create ways to encourage peopleto stay involved. — 210
Keep the group engaged through online activity. — 213
Build games and competition into the session where participants can call in and answer questionslive — a competitive format with prizes seems to get some enthusiasm. — 214
First and foremost — make it interactive. Keep the participants interest and engage them at everyopportunity. This should be part of the instructional design. — 153
Keep ALL students engaged. — 146
Look for opportunities to add interactions to promote engagement. — 226
Make it interactive! Use break-out rooms, research exercises, and collaborative tools. — 229
Strive to add excitement to each screen. Use multimedia (voice, video, and data) to keep the stu-dent’s attention. Engage the student by deploying lots of interaction. Employ simulations whereverfeasible. — 290
834 Tips for Successful Online Instruction | 28
Be available atall times. Givecell phone num-bers, InstantMessagingnames, andemail addresseswhen you can.The more yousupport thelearner, the bet-ter they willlearn.
Colleen ONeil, CLO, AlvaLearning Systems
II. Tips for Instructors continued
Engage learners by asking questions or selecting certain people to answer a question, or setting upa competition between groups or people. — 288
Encourage collaboration. I have been in online sessions where the instructor did not encourage audi-ence participation and lectured the entire time. It was easy to drift off and surf the web and not payattention because the instructor would never know. You have to keep the online sessions active, oth-erwise people get bored. — 288
Use a variety of interactivity techniques. Throughout the session, use as many interactive or engag-ing activities as possible. — 259
Plenty of participant involvement. — 257
Ensure that everyone participates and is comfortable doing so. But don’t be too pushy — there’s noway to know how the learner is feeling or what is happening in their life during the online courseunless they tell you. — 274
Try to involve everyone and use first names when possible. — 308
Use the learner’s first name. — 310
Use creative interactivity. — 326
Let the community know if you are going to be away for any length of time. — 81
Commit to the community and follow through. — 81
Commit yourself to establishing a personal, personable, trusting, and mutual confidence andencouragement-building relationship with every participant in your online course. — 113
Encourage participant interaction with other participants. — 131
Assign group projects online to make the experience richer. — 157
Build a team of learners (community building process), including developing a set of joint values....— 167
Building authentic relationships online is as important as it is in the physical classroom. The goal isto build a community of learners who can support as well as learn from each other. Understanding aconstructivist approach to teaching and learning would certainly help. — 195
ENGAGE the learner through interaction with other users. — 222
Establish an environment that encourages participation. — 148
Call on participants regularly, by name, to promote engagement and attention. — 262
Encourage learners to learn from each other. — 313
834 Tips for Successful Online Instruction | 29
To keep studentsfrom multi-task-ing during yourtraining, useinteraction tokeep theminvolved.
Linda Wathen,Implementation
Coordinator, Mediaplex
II. Tips for Instructors continued
b. Remember there are two different views on using scripts
Take the time to develop a very detailed script of what you want to say and what actions you willdo, with what application, how, and when. — 88
Don’t script — natural conversation is vital for this environment to make it successful. Like animalssense fear, learners sense memorized lines and it makes events less engaging. If a presenter speaks“from the heart,” it adds to their credibility. — 133
c. Be careful when giving directions
Be very specific in your communications to students, especially with respect to testing connectivitybefore the session and for first-time online students. — 21
Give very, very clear directions. — 27
Be deliberate about guidance for the student. First we are going to do this. Next we do this ... andafter that we will ... . Here are the opportunities where we will stop for questions or feedback orpractice ... or whatever. — 87
Be explicit when describing what you are doing. Where on the screen are you going (left, center,right, top, middle, bottom; specific labeled section) and what exact link, button, value, you are click-ing, choosing, or selecting? — 88
Be deliberate about explaining to the student what you are doing and why. (I am opening XYZ soft-ware to show you examples of ... .) — 87
Detail and clarity are important to eliminate confusion. — 94
Give clear directives to participants when asking for responses. — 112
Overwrite instructions. They can’t see your face or hear your voice for many things. — 249
Be clear in instructions and say it again, again, and again. — 305
Enunciate! Be clear in direction. — 301
Use the tools available in your synchronous session environment to help guide participants eyes torelevant topics. Don’t overuse tools available — i.e. happy mouse syndrome can drive participantscrazy. — 321
d. Use care when speaking to your “audience”
Transitions are key — if facilitators can keep things flowing smoothly without utilizing “cheesy”transitions such as “Isn’t that right Joe?”“Back to you,” etc. While OK from time to time, we’ve foundlearners say facilitators lose credibility with these types of transitions. — 133
834 Tips for Successful Online Instruction | 30
Develop collabo-rative groups.Have yourlearner groupstake respon-sibility for deliv-ering some ofthe learning.Ensure that thelearners under-stand their com-mitment to thelearning com-munity.
Beverly Wood,Professor, USC
II. Tips for Instructors continued
Know your audience and call on them as you would in a live classroom. This ensures people are pay-ing attention and not multi-tasking during the session. — 214
Establish a friendly and meaningful atmosphere. — 146
Think talk show, not lecture. — 304
The internet can be impersonal — how can you make this session more personal? Use voice inflec-tion, interaction, and participatory activities even more than you might in the traditional classroom.— 303
Patience is a must. Students don’t listen to instructions well, and tend to wait to the last minute toget work done, which makes the instructors’ work all that more difficult. — 280
Go for interactivity, comprehension checks, simulations, online quizzes etc. Don’t pile on lecture andlinks and have students inundated with just reading material. — 282
Be there virtually! A teacher’s presence is still needed, and this contributes to the dynamics of theclass. Don’t put your material on “Kiosk” mode and disappear from the learning environment.” —282
Think about and experience the course as much as you can from the learner’s perspective — theyare surely having a different experience than you as the teacher. — 303
You are still the instructor, not the technology. — 334
Use both synchronous & asynchronous modes of interaction. — 313
Must be able to think on the fly and get the audience involved. — 322
Mix up delivery of content. — 81
Stay ahead of your participants (this means post often, compliment and re-direct off-topic discus-sion, and be the most prepared in your course). — 22
Re-emphasize important points. — 44
My most favorite is use of a favorite formula: S=5W+H where: S=story; W=Who, What, When, Where,Why; H=How. — 48
Take time with each slide. — 53
(Be an) online presence serving as the guide on the side. — 37
Be succinct.
Communicate early — be clear and concise (give examples). — 81
Don’t read the slides. — 132
834 Tips for Successful Online Instruction | 31
Providingdetailed assign-ment descrip-tions and clearlydefining dead-lines is essentialfor learner success.
Daniel Stanford,Instructional Designer,
The Savannah Collegeof Art and Design
II. Tips for Instructors continued
Pace yourself to your audience. Monitor the speed of delivery, and adapt if needed. Involve youraudience. Ask interactive questions periodically. — 132
Teach to multiple learning styles. — 92
Set up real-world scenarios for participants to interact with. — 131
Engage the audience. — 138
Engage the audience as if they were in your living room. — 139
Use a wide variety of devices to keep the pace, rhythm and energy in the session. (Devices meanspeaking, asking questions and seeing a raise of hands, directing learners to reflect, presenting awide variety of visual and multimedia inputs...). Prepare. Prepare. Prepare. Make sure all the stuff youwant to have come up on screen is working — and working in the way you want. — 160
Stand up on occasion to deliver the presentation with more energy. — 178
Remember to mix it up! Talking the whole time will not keep the audiences’ interest. You shouldhave some interactivity if you are presenting live. — 179
Interact with your audience. If you just do a slide show without any communication between youand the audience, the audience may sleep through the presentation. — 189
Use interaction if at all possible. — 190
Fun, and interaction keeps them involved. Use specific types of content. — 155
It is absolutely necessary to take frequent breaks from a long presentation. — 169
Teach people how to help themselves and each other, rather than being the sole provider of infor-mation. — 167
Guide the learners through the process, rather than traditional “expert to novice” approach. — 167
If you’re using uploaded slides, interact with them a lot! An instructor’s voice droning on whileshowing a static bulleted list of items is fodder for naps, not learning. Mix it up. Change things,whether you show a video or switch to an application or web page, or put up an interactive quizthat they respond to and you share the results. — 184
It’s pretty important to maintain a dynamic instructional flow in an online setting. This includes theappropriate integration of text, graphics, images, audio, video, etc. for the specific course. — 195
Keep content brief and to the point. Break content up into short sentences and short paragraphs.
Remember to facilitate learning, i.e.“The guide on the side versus the sage on the stage.” — 223
It’s not about you; it’s about the learner and the learning. Create hooks to hang learning memorieson. — 241
834 Tips for Successful Online Instruction | 32
Move yourmouse slowlyand rememberthat peoplecan’t see yourhand, only themouse. Enlargethe mouse size if possible.Describe whatyou’re doing asyou do it. Trynot to skiparound toomuch — thishelps people fol-low along. If theinstructor goestoo quickly,viewers losetrack of themouse location.
Susan Clark, LearningCoordinator, Stantec
Consulting Ltd.
II. Tips for Instructors continued
Speak slowly because not everyone has broadband bandwidth. — 288
Use the tools — teach people to waggle the icons to get attention, use the “go faster” or “go slower”capabilities, and send chat messages to the presenters and to each other. — 320
Push to make it relevant to all learners in the mix. — 190
Death by PowerPoint is even more deadly in a virtual classroom! — 215
Don’t just have text on your screen. Use graphic examples to help your audience visualize your topic.Remember, they usually can’t see you, and if you do have a web cam on, they can’t see your faceclearly enough to stay interested. You have to give them something to look at or the audience willstray. — 219
I found that using cartoon (Flash) technology interspersed with instruction also was very useful.— 169
Pause to make sure that everyone is seeing what you are seeing. — 148
Make it clear in your mind what you want your students to learn and do, and communicate that toyour students. — 227
Focus on establishing the context for the content. — 226
Don’t get carried away with the “wow” factor. Focus on accomplishing your instructional objectives.— 226
Make it engaging — it’s not PowerPoint. — 228
Limit the use of PowerPoint slides. — 229
Keep your communications short and as sensory-based as possible. — 230
Make your instruction engaging for the learner. Do not just lecture! Include a wide variety of presen-tation methods and activities. Use graphics, sounds, and transitions appropriately, and selectively.— 233
Make your training personal; let the learners see/know who you are. — 235
Online instructors must give clear information without deviating from the topic. The material theyprovide on screen must be direct, precise, accurate, and interesting. Use pictures and images rele-vantly, not like it should look jazzy to attract the user’s attention. — 245
Take slight digression from the linear nature of the subject wherever possible to offer alternativeperspectives on the subjects, just as you would do so in class for students who do not understandthe subject matter from the initial outlay. — 292
Structure your sessions so you are facilitating, not lecturing. Just because the tools give you god-likecontrol, don’t let it go to your head. — 291
834 Tips for Successful Online Instruction | 33
Be an onlinemoderator instead of anonline instruc-tor. I prefer touse the termmoderatorinstead of instructor because I believe thata training orlearning activityor processshould beLEARNER-centricinstead of PRE-SENTER- or CON-TENT-centric.That is a big difference; alsoreferring tocompetenciesand skills needed.
Jeroen Spierings,Business Development
Manager, BT
II. Tips for Instructors continued
Provide CONTENT on screen! Don’t leave it up to the learner to have to listen to your lecture. — 269
Control participant communication or feedback activities if possible. — 260
Pacing and surveys. — 250
Slides are not the presentation. This is true of both classroom and web-based training, but is moreimportant on the internet. Any slide you use should support your message, and offer the learnersanother way of getting the information. A graphical representation of what you are saying is rein-forcing. Heavy text is often just a distracter. — 303
Remember that most of the folks in the session are probably there for one reason: to get informa-tion from an expert, not to have Websites recited to them. Make it fun and interesting. Folks learnmore when they feel comfortable than when they feel like they are in class — just my opinion.— 277
Remember this is a classroom ... not a library. — 279
The number one important thing is communications. Develop as many channels as possible, and putimportant messages out over all of them. — 280
Understand the baseline knowledge of the students & adapt delivery accordingly. Before anythingelse, ensure that the students can access the training material — in some cases this may involvesome basic IT skill training across the workforce. — 309
Voice inflection, types of interactivity, frequent questions, sharing applications with members of theclass, and how to build the class for the delivery method. — 331
Use a scenario. Get the student involved before the session even starts. Appeal to learning styles andguide their learning, don’t lecture them. — 311
Strive to make the class as interactive as possible. — 313
Use as many relevant examples as possible.
Highly interactive — from both the content itself as well as the surroundings of the content. — 174
Use teletechniques. — 319
(Have the) gift of gab, but talk slow and deliberate. — 44
Gesture and smile while you speak — no one will see you, but it will add to the conversational toneof your voice. — 564
Keep your voice expressive. No one wants an instructor like Ferris Bueller had — especially online!
Always smile, and always be positive! — 68
Be personable! — 81
834 Tips for Successful Online Instruction | 34
Keep it engag-ing! Do notmake yourcourseware theonline equiva-lent of the old“Death bySlides” instruc-tor-led training.
Russ Weddle,Consultant, ChaddeCustom Computing
II. Tips for Instructors continued
Be the voice for “radio” when working in the online environment. — 100
Change your voice pitch and speed. Sound like you are interested and excited. A dull voice is moredeadly online than in person. — 109
Connect and be personable with users. Don’t act condescending — tone of voice, etc. Avoid jargon— users hate that (and so would an instructor if, for example, a surgeon was explaining heart sur-gery using medical terms). Slow down and be sure that information is clear enough. — 115
Don’t talk — facilitate! — 114
Be motivating. — 90
DELIVERY: — 1121. Check all participants’ audio before the event begins.2. Speak slowly and clearly.3. Wait for the slides to load (or screen to refresh during AppShare) before speaking.4. Ask participants to indicate the screen has loaded during AppShare / Web Safari by giving a “yes”or “no” response.5. Include some participant activity every 5 — 7 slides.
Don’t read from a script. — 131
Keep the presentation flowing. — 139
Imitate your favorite DJ. — 185
In a synchronous environment, pretend you are a radio announcer — do not allow dead space! — 186
Being boring in person is even more deadly online. Use varied vocal inflections and vary the pace.— 217
Treat everyone equally. — 159
Keep it short and keep it visual — avoid too much teacher talk. — 200
Ensure you are matching your teaching style with your student’s learning style. — 144
Establish an effective communication structure immediately. — 147
Summarize frequently. — 146
My favorite tip is to always remember that the learner is by himself or herself, and does not have thesupport of a live instructor. — 238
You are not driving a tour bus. Do not fall into PowerPoint presentation mode. Actively engage yourlearners continuously throughout. — 291
834 Tips for Successful Online Instruction | 35
Cultivate theintimacy —never let alearner thinks/he is part of acrowd of folksall getting thesame cannedservice.
Godfrey Parkin,MindRise
II. Tips for Instructors continued
Smile when you talk ... the audience can tell the difference. Stay on topic... we usually have to stayon a pretty focused time frame — try to stay on the topic. Don’t get nervous when you think thatyou are talking in front of hundreds of people. — 286
There are many tools that can support the development of an online course; your focus should belearner-centered. As an online instructor your role is to facilitate student learning — not be the“sage on the stage.” Communication. — 300
Your voice says it all — think about your favorite DJ and emulate that type of upbeat, active voice.
Use constructive language with everyone. — 314
Use humor only when you are sure your participants will understand it. Avoid the use of humor in across-cultural audience. — 17
Use humor wisely — context is more difficult to create in an on-line world. — 22
Have a sense of humor during class and online, but be careful not to sound condescending, sarcastic,or angry in tone. — 46
Inject light-hearted humor where possible. — 50
Add fun technologies like “Crazy Talk” and “Talking Slide” to liven things up. Let a hamster tell themwhen it is time to take their exam or emphasize key points. No matter how serious the topic, inter-ject levity. — 50
Humor — 168
Use humor to lighten the atmosphere and encourage participation. — 315
Use humor, students are mostly stressed in a classroom, and a little humor will go a long way. — 316
Use humor when appropriate — it puts the participants at ease, especially if they have never usedthe technology. — 161
A good sense of humor helps as well! — 195
Use appropriate humor.
Interject humor. — 310
e. Ask questions
Make the learning interactive. — 306
Ask your participants questions that will indicate whether or not they understand — 34
Never assume anybody is on the same page you are during a webcast, so you had better ask them!— 47
834 Tips for Successful Online Instruction | 36
Enunciate clear-ly and distinctly.Speaking toofast or too farfrom the micro-phone will makeit difficult forthe audience tounderstand you.
Jeff Tyson, Manager ofMultimedia
Development, TechResource Group, Inc.
II. Tips for Instructors continued
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Don’t suggest answers to questions (let people use their own words). Don’t finish ideas for folks (letthem struggle to find their own valuable ones). Don’t accept the first answer (let the group exhaustall possibilities). Don’t judge, compare or contrast people with others (real or imagined). Don’t pro-vide false feedback, insincere praise, or unwarranted criticism. Don’t assume what is best for a group(help them to decide for themselves). Don’t always focus on negatives, mistakes, setbacks, failures,and weaknesses. Gathered from the Online Facilitation eGroup managed by Nancy White of FullCircle and Associates USA (http://www.fullcirc.com) and adapted by Josephine Murray PelionConsulting Pty Ltd. TAS. Australia 2001 (http://www.pelino.com.au). — 26
Ask questions throughout to ensure that learning is taking place. — 67
Make the learning experience as interactive as you possibly can. — 67
Ask frequent questions. — 76
Be sure you use questioning to get at the student’s meta-cognitive processes — it is critical thatboth you and the student understand how they are thinking about the subject. — 92
Be sure to ask lots of questions as a way to gain interactivity. The questions can be a test of knowl-edge, point of view, or just for fun. — 98
Don’t assume — ask questions and clarify. — 80
Feedback via questions. — 174
Involve the participant by personally asking questions to each (or some individuals) to engage themin the process. The event should not be a data / information dump — there should be activities toensure the knowledge is transferred. Otherwise you can just send them a document to read, whybother with the live event? — 193
Since you can’t read faces or body language for cues, solicit feedback or ask questions at regularintervals. — 217
For easy interactions, ask questions that can be answered by hand signals or icon buttons. — 154
If participants are participating as a group, with a single connection per group, make sure you haveextra “dead air” for the participants to discuss answers to polls or questions. — 154
Ask lots of questions (even if it’s just click the green check for “yes” or the red X for “no”)! It’s mucheasier to disengage when you’re participating online, so participation is the key. — 336
INVITE learners to give you their questions by explaining the multiple methods they have for askingthem (voice, chat, etc), and planting your own “seed” questions. Remind people several times duringthe presentation to use the chat room for questions. Start each session with an explanation of howto participate. We will have to do this until webinars are ubiquitous. People know how to walk into aconference room and participate in a meeting or class (sit down in a chair, raise your hand to ask aquestion, nod when you agree), but they are often nervous about this new type of classroom, andneed more guidance. Once they get comfortable with the format, then they can focus on content.— 303
834 Tips for Successful Online Instruction | 38
Know your tech-nology andadjust for thenuances. Forexample, yourvoice inflectionis more impor-tant than youreye contact. Justlike radio, themedium ampli-fies your passion(or lack of pas-sion).
Randy Cowling,Multimedia Designer,
New World RestaurantGroup
II. Tips for Instructors continued
Ask questions throughout to ensure that you are not losing the learner. — 148
Pose questions that you are sure at least some people can answer. — 230
Posing synthesis and evaluation questions. — 258
Know how to ask questions and probe for understanding of content. — 322
Polling the class and sharing results can be effective. Use the polling device to have people respondwith “yes,”“no,”“maybe.” — 329
f. Listen to learners and to their answers
Listen to what the students are saying — learn to listen to the written word! — 224
Listening and hearing is an order of magnitude more important than talking! — 225
Offer creative insight, be receptive and understanding (Bob Zimmer and Gary Alexander, 2000) — 244
Respond to inquiries as soon as possible — within 12 hours if possible. — 38
Answer all questions. Even if you have answered them 5 times before, answer them again. — 46
Always take lots of time when explaining answers to student’s questions. Make your answers con-cise and step-by-step logical. — 69
Respond to every audio sound you hear — it’s a heads-up that an important participant’s feedbackor question is just about to come in. — 55
Answer the student’s inquiry expediently and as precisely as possible, breaking down the course lan-guage into layman’s terms, and giving examples. — 72
Ask students to identify themselves when they speak. — 87
Let the class take the lead in answering their own questions, before you do (be facilitative in thelearning process). — 91
When responding to a question that doesn’t require you to be looking at the monitor, close youreyes to remove all other visual distractions. — 103
Always be ready to answer a question. — 122
Don’t waffle! — 134
Repeat questions before answering. — 138
834 Tips for Successful Online Instruction | 39
II. Tips for Instructors continuedQuestions mustdrive a conclu-sion or trainingexercise. Do notask questionsjust for the sakeof asking.
Chris Bond, President,Bluewater Interactive
Consulting group
Listen intently. Intonations and inflections impact the quality of the session. Be positive and uplift-ing at all times. Never show your frustration with a participant’s inability to understand a specificpiece of material. — 223
Create a list of possible questions participants may ask and develop your responses. — 223
LISTEN closely to what people say. HEAR how they are saying it. — 222
Be brief, concise, and clear. Craft model answers or model responses and simply customize them fordifferent learners — you can save hours of repetitive thinking and typing, and still provide individu-alized service. — 291
State when you will answer questions. — 288
g. Include exercises in your sessions
Always have Pop quizzes and surveys in the middle of lessons to get an idea of whether learners areactually responding to your instruction. — 30
Organize your discussions to accommodate high levels of interactivity. — 57
Create an assignment where each participant has a chance to moderate an online discussion.Provide the participant with tips for moderating, and ask him or her to summarize the discussion.— 117
Employ an exercise or game that requires participants to send individual messages to one another— this triangulates the learning; give them a five-minute work-by-yourself assignment and then goaround the horn displaying results. — 136
I do a lot of software training over WebEx, and I use a model of passing the mouse over to the stu-dents so they can show what they have learned after major sections. Because only one person at atime can drive the mouse, I create various roles for the other students. I always have the Driver, butthen I also select a Picker, and a Talker. The Picker selects the example to demonstrate, and the Talkermust instruct the Driver what to do with the mouse. The Driver may not move the mouse unless theTalker instructs to do so. The remainder of the audience serves as Coaches, who have three roles. Thefirst role is to “harrumph” if the Driver moves the mouse without instruction. The second role is to“ahem” if it appears that the Talker is sending the Driver in an incorrect direction. The coaches fur-ther serve as a resource if the Talker asks for help. This keeps everyone focused on the screen andthey are thinking thru the steps as the process occurs. It creates collaboration and reinforces thesteps of the activity. The students have a lot of fun with this, especially when there are mixed levelsin the audience and someone gets to tell their boss what to do. — 170
I like to have students take control of the screen and have them practice what we just discussed. If Iam teaching how to use PowerPoint I will give students control and have them work on a slide sowe are building a presentation as we go. — 173
Include exercises in the handouts with the answers revealed online. — 154
834 Tips for Successful Online Instruction | 40
II. Tips for Instructors continuedIf students postrequests orquestions thatare particular tothem (the dis-cussion would-n’t really benefitthe rest of theclass), post ashort messagetelling the stu-dent you willcontact him orher via email tohandle his orher specificrequest. Thiscuts the threadat that point.
Mark Veljkov, VP,Education OnLine, Inc.
If your handouts are the same PowerPoint file as your presentation, don’t forget to remove anyanswer pages from the handouts. Seems like a no-brainer but it is an easy detail to forget. — 154
Provide exercises using “live” applications and websites where possible. — 229
Provide multiple opportunities and multiple modalities for students to demonstrate skill and/orknowledge mastery. — 253
Use review exercises appropriately (true or false, multi-choice, short answer, review games, and puzzles). — 318
Creatively adapt classroom exercises for synchronous online delivery. — 327
h. Make student assignments clearly and precisely
Balance individual and group assignments. — 57
Set clear guidelines for posting and labeling assignments. — 57
Stagger your assignment due dates to give your students ample time to read and comment on theirclassmates’ postings before the next section of the course begins. For example, make discussionquestions due on the third day of the week instead of the last day. This also helps the instructormanage his or her own time since there will be more time available to give feedback on studentwork before turning attention to the next subject. Think about adding at least one peer-evaluatedassignment or activity to the mix. — 57
Give ample time for assignments, reiterations, and revisions, etc. — 72
If your learning strategies include assignments, make sure instructions are clear and complete.— 223
Don’t make everything due at once or on Friday. Provide a window of time for response ... theirs andyours. — 287
i. Set up class activities
Be flexible — it’s not always easy to predict what activities (will work). — 11
Do not try to TEACH the user — let him LEARN on his own (that is why he chose this medium). — 19
Send out announcements prior to important activities or milestones. — 39
Always prepare chats beforehand, prepare interesting questions, topics, and, if possible, distributethe questions or the information beforehand so that chats can be useful. Don’t think a useful chatwill last more than 40 minutes. Think of 40 minutes devoted to academic issues and use theremaining time to promote interaction. — 45
834 Tips for Successful Online Instruction | 41
II. Tips for Instructors continuedIf you use a CMSwith a drop boxfeature, in theAssignments areaperiodically postoptional assign-ments that are funbut which relateto the course.Usually relates tosearching the Webfor somethingalong with a set ofspecific questionsthey must answerabout it. First per-son to submit allthe right answersfor the item viathe Drop Box (ittime-stamps sub-missions), wins aprize. This hasalways been popular.
Kate MacDonald, Directorof Instructional DesignServices, Massachusetts
College of Pharmacy andHealth Sciences
You’ll never learn the directions if you’re the passenger in a car. Best way of learning is doing it your-self. Deliver the material online and give a breakout session with a hands-on example for them to doat the end. Pose a question or simulation they need to perform. This is very useful for complex simu-lations, or CAD programming etc. Give them an hour and then share results. — 2
Don’t lecture on content or material as the ultimate and only method expecting learning to occur.Create ways to use content causing a student to analyze and apply content. — 41
Before creating group activities, have students assess their personalities and group them according-ly. Try to create a balanced group before assigning a project. This will lead to greater success for thegroup, and a greater appreciation of each personality type. — 102
Allow lots of activities. — 127
Include individual and small-group activities if manageable. — 190
Keep the students active by having them perform on-line tasks, if it’s having them do mediocretasks. Announce in the very beginning of the session that you will be calling on students to performtasks at any time. Rather than being embarrassed, the students will pay closer attention to you areteaching, in the event they are called on to perform something. — 211
Provide enough time for participants to interact during the activities. Don’t rush. Provide enoughinformation to enable participants to do the activities. Try to appeal to people with different learn-ing styles, e.g. some talk, some listening, some doing, something creative, etc. Follow up on-linelearning with time to reflect, and then come back together to discuss. — 270
Instill lots of interactivity such as games, simulations, and directed discussions. — 274
Use breakout rooms with facilitator present guiding. Someone other than the facilitator should runthe technology. — 317
j. Use demonstrations effectively
My favorite online tools simulation is where I show how its done and get them to use the tool, andat the same time build their own statistical model on their PC, configure the USB chip etc. — 2
Know your setup. If you are going to demo it, use a screen capture to show the point / clicks. Playback the demo and concentrate on talking about the screen action. — 132
k. Include appropriate simulations and games
With simulation, allow plenty of pauses for questions, and to allow clarification and even to ensureusers are all on the same page! — 2
Add games and simulations to your lessons. — 114
Don’t be afraid of games. Just make sure that they are tightly bound to the content. — 125
834 Tips for Successful Online Instruction | 42
II. Tips for Instructors continuedDesign activitiesthat promotenot only dia-logue throughon-line venues,but with thosewho are in thesame locationfor project work,discussions etc.
Kathleen Hueser,Principal ISD, UDLP, ASD,
Army Training
Don’t use e-Learning for the learning domain of psychomotor skills unless you have a huge budgetto create simulators. — 190
Utilize games where practical. — 146
Make your online sessions more interesting with little games or activities the learner can do.Developing sheets together is building up a team which is very important for success. — 234
Push a Web address for a simulation exercise for “hands on” software interaction during the event.— 242
l. Don’t be afraid of sharing applications
SHARING APPLICATIONS / WEB SAFARI: — 1121. Open the application you are sharing prior to the session.2. Keep the AppShare session short.3. Set up an application entry point to focus participants’ attention.4. Involve experts in the class as presenters.5. If sharing a participant’s application, prepare that application to launch in advance of the session.6. Click on another Agenda item or choose another CentraOne tool to stop the AppShare session.
App Sharing — consider recording the demo and playing it back while the presenter speaks. Wehave done this using Camtasia and saving as a Flash file. The audience can’t tell the difference, andit can minimize some of the live app-sharing pitfalls — high bandwidth issues, waiting for menus /windows / dialog boxes to appear, app running more slowly in app sharing mode, app failing and/orcrashing. Advantages would be that it requires the presenter to plan / rehearse, and the demos canbe repurposed. — 154
If a meeting tool does not adequately support your materials, such as animated and active slides,use application sharing. Do not just make do!!! More interactivity — still more — I mean a lotmore!!! — 176
Always have a place for sharing resources. — 274
Sharing applications in real time is more effective than (by now predictable and boring) survey ques-tions. — 324
m. Include offline activities in your plan
Use regular posted assessments to get polls from audience.- 2
Make use of offline media. — 313
Utilize standard media which most students have access to, such as PDF files, html files, etc. — 328
When using a link to Internet resources, include an alternate link with similar information in casethe first (and probably best) site is unavailable. — 333
834 Tips for Successful Online Instruction | 43
II. Tips for Instructors continuedWhen movinginto applicationshare, remindstudents to clickthe ExpandedDisplay (or appshare maximize)button.
Jeff Tyson, Manager ofMultimedia
Development, TechResource Group, Inc.
n. Assess progress
Evaluating student participation can be difficult when online communication tools create more textthan one instructor can evaluate. — 272
I get them to give me a precise answer following what I’ve just shown them. Gives me buy-in fromthem, and they get to understand it better. — 2
Evaluate learning success. — 8
In a synchronous classroom, use the poll feature as mini-quizzes to ensure understanding. — 43
At 30% or 40% of the course categorize the learners into Red, Amber, and Green areas based on reg-ularity and activity completion, and think of addressing and treating these groups differently interms of message tone, content support, motivational support, etc. — 39
Create concept guides that are brief and direct. These will work as quick references the learners canbrush through while they prepare for the final assessment. — 39
Blend synchronous classroom with subsequent one-on-one coaching by using the email system tocheck student performance and provide feedback. — 43
Having a quiz at the start or end of the live session makes people prepare before hand. It is neces-sary to use techniques to force this habit since students have years of doing it the other way, attend-ing class and then studying afterwards.
Track each student’s progress on a regular basis. — 114
Clear and distinct outline of level of training achieved. — 174
If you are using online quizzes or tests, create a “sample” test for students to try out. This allowsthem to familiarize themselves with the format of the test (i.e. how to navigate between pages,how to “save” answers, that type of thing) without being under the pressure of learning these newthings as well as answering the test questions, within a set time limit. — 180
Follow up lesson with knowledge assessments. — 243
If your online training system (For example WebEx) has a survey tool, you can use this to pretest /posttest students during a lesson. You can also have an informal quiz at the end of a module. Thishelps both attention and retention. — 183
o. Remember the course evaluations
EVALUATIONS: 1. Tell participants explicitly to answer the questions and click Submit when com-plete. 2. Tell participants to give you a green check mark when they have submitted the evaluation.(This helps with gauging time.) 3. Give participants a time limit and tell them how many items arein the evaluation prior to showing it to them. 4. Use evaluations to review material as necessary.— 112
834 Tips for Successful Online Instruction | 44
II. Tips for Instructors continuedAssess early andoften.
Lisa Wieland Handy, AVP/ Sr. Consultant,
Mellon
C. Pay attention to four special skills1. Give and receive feedback
Take the feedback or an acknowledgement from the learners. — 271
Provide a survey to get user feedback and then follow up. — 13
Feedback is a must. — 29
Provide timely feedback to students. — 37
Remember to follow up. — 39
Provide swift and continuous feedback — whereever possible let the computer provide it. — 92
Students want timely feedback so respond to posts and assignments as quickly as possible withconstructive and substantive comments. — 94
Provide feedback on a regular and timely basis. — 114
Provide feedback in a timely manner. — 147
Feedback, Feedback, Feedback! It encourages students and increases their productivity. — 151
Read before you post a comment. Tone, especially a disparaging tone, really does come through inonline communication. I’ve seen learners totally turned off by an instructor who was a put-downartist. And I know the instructor would never have said the same words if they had been face-to-face with the learner. — 274
Provide timely and meaningful feedback. — 313
Give everyone thorough feedback so there is not just an evaluation of work but a real, personalizedlearning experience that, in a way, can be a lot stronger than in the traditional classroom. — 314
Invite feedback.
Make sure you ask for feedback when you do sessions yourself. — 231
Ask for feedback from your students about what is working and what is not, and don’t wait until theend of the course to do this. — 243
2. Be effective when correcting learners
Learn how to interject a correction without sounding harsh or critical online — which is a much dif-ferent environment than being face-to-face because there is no body language to indicate “how”something is being said. — 91
834 Tips for Successful Online Instruction | 45
II. Tips for Instructors continuedIn giving feed-back on assign-ments, yourmost detailedresponsesshould be to thefirst individualassignment andthe last or majorproject. (The for-mer, to establishyour baselinestandards andhelp studentsunderstandwhat is expect-ed.)
Mark Veljkov, VP,Education OnLine, Inc.
3. Handle silence without fear
Manage silences and dead air. — 12
Silence does not equate with understanding or consent. — 34
It is very hard to hold someone’s attention online. You only have one visual object for them to focuson. Even a 15 second pause can lose a student. — 31
Allow silence to happen — distant sites may be un-muting or experiencing a slight lag and mayneed more time than F2F in order to respond. — 217
4. Deal with problems effectively and professionally
Dealing with conflict or difficult students. (271)
Have sufficient technical knowledge to perform first-line troubleshooting. — 10
Know how to troubleshoot the technology from a learner’s point of view. — 46
Know what to do if something goes wrong — lost connection, screen freezes, etc. — 111
Have a phone number or contact to route support questions. — 4
Be flexible — we are all adults and life happens. — 38
When moving into application share, if students cannot see the application, have them close out ofthe LiveMeeting session and re-enter it. — 56
Have a backup presenter and hard copy of slides just in case technology goes down. — 74
Have alternate activities handy in case something is not working well. — 259
D. Do your follow-upAcquire feedback regularly. Continuously improve on the design and delivery. — 105
Incorporate student’s suggestions or feedback in the WBTS. — 271
Keep in constant email and/or discussion thread contact. If someone appears to be missing contactthat person, individually, and find out what is wrong. — 198
Plan to interact with your online students and your course daily. Do not make excuses for your lackof presence or your lapse in participation in the online learning experience. Answer email and gradeassignments within your stated response time frames (i.e. 48 hours). — 253
Communicate often with your students. — 114
834 Tips for Successful Online Instruction | 46
II. Tips for Instructors continuedDon’t be afraidof “facilitateddead space” —sometimes deadspace is neces-sary in order forthe participantsto complete atask. (By deadspace, I meantime when noone is talking.)
Mary Gutwein,Learning Specialist,
Humana MilitaryHealthcare Services
Connect with learners — make it crisp, interactive and follow up on material. — 116
Let your personality shine through in your emails and discussions. Use appropriate humor to let yourstudents see your lighter side. — 221
Set expectations early and often, and do not disappoint — if you tell learners you will alwaysrespond within three days, do so, if only to acknowledge receipt; if you set the expectation at within24 hours then live up to the promise. — 291
Answer email and phone calls, it is a way students connect. Be prompt with your responses. — 305
Use synchronous learning wisely, not just because you want to. (306)
The instructor is encouraged to adopt best practices such as the American Association for HigherEducation’s Seven Principles for Good Practice in Undergraduate Education (available athttp://www.tltgroup.org/programs/seven.html). (240)
Enough transparency of the technology to achieve the goal: learners learn. (240)
A. Selecting online instructors for success1. Choose instructors based on competencies
The instructor has taught the course in a face-to-face setting, or is highly experienced with the con-tent. — 240
The instructor must communicate effectively in writing, and is able to express ideas, concerns, sug-gestions, and answers to students succinctly and clearly. — 240
The ability to troubleshoot basic technical issues without sounding frustrated. — 240
2. Choose instructors with the right attitudes
The instructor is willing to modify and adapt teaching methods and strategies based on student orparticipant feedback. — 240
The instructor has an understanding of the increased value of asking good questions and promptingresponses — 240
The instructor has an appreciation for the complexities of what used to be easy: small group activi-ties, file sharing, testing, etc., homework assignments. — 240
A positive customer service attitude — no whining, no blaming! — 240
834 Tips for Successful Online Instruction | 47
II. Tips for Instructors continuedRemember thatthe online environmentrequires moreeffort on yourpart to developa learning com-munity. Check inwith your onlinestudents insome way atleast every 48 hours —through anannouncement,a group email,personal emails,responses tohomework, ordiscussion posts.
Donna Welschmeyer,Director, Online
Program Development,Colorado Community
Colleges Online
III. Tips for Managers
GMAC accelerates business processes and saves over $12 million a year using WebEx.
A WebEx customer since 2000, this premier financial services company uses a full suite of WebEx applications.
WebEx Customer Success Story
Virtually all GMACCM employees rely on WebEx to help them train rapidly, communicate with team members quickly, and get their jobs done more efficiently. The results have been substantial. The company is slashing travel costs throughout the organization. Training takes place online instead of onsite. Sales reps get in front of more customers in less time. And the company is able to provide fast help desk support to remote users. WebEx is a vital part of the culture in this organization.
We developed a cost-to-benefit analysis when we first deployed WebEx that showed we were saving $3,500 in cost per trained employee per year – that’s comes to over 12 million dollars a year we saved.— Sandra Morris, Vice President, Learning and Employee Development
GMAC Commercial Mortgage Corporation (GMACCM) is a premier financial services firm with extensive funding sources that, coupled with a broad menu of innovative financing programs, serves the needs of borrowers of commercial real estate debt as well as the providers of capital. GMACCM is an industry leader in loan origination, servicing, asset management, investment management, and technology services. This diverse lending and servicing specialist and its affiliates employ 3,500 staff in more than 100 offices worldwide.
The Challenge In 1999, GMACCM was planning their first company-wide rollout of a new PeopleSoft Time Card system. The company’s training team, led by Vice President of Learning and Employee Development Sandra Morris, prepared to support the rollout by supplementing their six-person training staff with six consultants. This extended team would rotate between GMACCM’s 100 global locations in North America, Europe, and Asia, doing live, onsite train-ing with local employees. Difficulty in scheduling times at the remote offices, however, interrupted the preset training schedule and trainers frequently had to leave for the next leg of their trip before ever getting in front of a classroom. “We spent a lot of time and money on this training plan, and then ended up having to do it all over again via phone and email,” says Morris. “Quite frankly, it was a disaster.”
The Solution According to Morris, “I was introduced to WebEx by one of our sister companies. After I talked with the company and saw what it could do, I was ready to move forward.” Morris began using WebEx in 2000 to deliver a series of common busi-ness application training sessions. The
intention was to slowly introduce WebEx to the organization, gain adoption in indi-vidual departments and workgroups, and let it migrate at a comfortable pace across the enterprise. “It took about six months before our employees knew about it and what it could do,” Morris says. “We gave them the option of taking trainings via in-person classes, or online with WebEx. The first WebEx users immediately asked for all their training content to be delivered online—they didn’t want in-person trainings anymore.”
GMACCM’s training group now facilitates one training a month on its twelve com-mon business applications, plus a number of new hire presentations, via WebEx Training Center. “The only time we offer in-person classroom trainings now is when we have an upgrade that the entire com-pany needs to get,” says Morris. “Then we use a blended in-person/online training model that lets us rollout as efficiently as possible.”
GMACCM expanded its use of WebEx online meeting applications by adopting it for use by business managers for routine meetings. This use dramatically increased after 9/ll, when GM put a moratorium on all business travel. “We were slammed with people requesting training on how to use WebEx,” says Morris. “We started training our business teams on how to host their own WebEx meetings. Now our executives are using it to facilitate collabo-ration among their departments and to communicate and collaborate with all their internal and external constituents.”
Morris feels WebEx has become an inte-gral part of GMACCM’s culture, noting that everyone at every level of the organiza-tion uses WebEx business applications. One of the more interesting changes WebEx has driven was the adoption of a
INDUSTRY Commercial real estate
WEBEX APPLICATIONS WebEx Enterprise Edition
SUMMARY WebEx meetings transform the entire GMAC Commercial Mortgage business culture into a high performance workplace that communicates and collaborates faster and better than ever before.
ABOUT GMAC COMMERCIAL MORTGAGE Line of business: Mortgage services
Headquarters: Horsham, PA
Number of employees: 3500
Has been a WebEx customer: Since 2000
new Management Curriculum for senior executives. According to Morris, “Prior to WebEx, a senior executive would not step foot into an in-person classroom training because there was a perception that high-level execs shouldn’t need that kind of information. WebEx created a new training environment that engaged their interest. After we saw their attendance increase and knew that our adoption was going to be high, we evolved our Management Curriculum, delivered via WebEx Training Center. It’s now required.”
WebEx is also fully integrated into the company’s backend Learning Management System (LMS), the PeopleSoft Learning Enterprise, and Morris’ team schedules all WebEx training sessions directly through the LMS. This facilitates automated emails with registra-
tion information, tracking attendance, updating employee records, and keeping department managers notified of their staff training activities. The integration also enabled a very successful deployment of the company’s Performance Management Training. Required for all managers, the trainings were delivered over a three-week period via WebEx Training Center, along with follow-on performance appraisals. Those with low appraisals were sup-ported with additional instruction until they achieved the required performance levels. “In the past, we actually had entire groups that never completed the appraisal process,” says Morris. “WebEx allowed us to ensure performance levels company-wide and track those appraisals within our LMS. We never could have accomplished this without WebEx.”
The efficiencies that the GMACCM/WebEx synergy has made possible are also being noticed by other GM divisions. Morris’s use of WebEx to host a meeting of the GM Training Counsel, of which she is a member, generated high praise. “I had sixty attendees signed onto WebEx for a 4-hour session. After the meeting, I was overwhelmed with feedback saying that the WebEx session was the best they had ever attended. GM was using Placeware (now Microsoft Live Meeting) at the time and the service was always a challenge. After my presentation, GM did an analysis of WebEx based on our posi-tive experience and the savings we were realizing, and effective in 2005, made it mandatory that everyone in their organiza-tion use WebEx.”
GM did an analysis of WebEx based on our positive experience and the savings we were realizing, and effective in 2005, made it mandatory that everyone in their organization use WebEx.— Sandra Morris, Vice President, Learning and Employee Development
Deploying WebEx Across the Enterprise
HIGHLIGHTS • GMAC Commercial Mortgage was hampered in deploying training by the size and geography of its global workforce.
• WebEx Training Center reduced training deployments from several months to a few weeks and generated savings of $3,500 in costs per trained employee per year, with a total of over 12 million dollars saved.
• WebEx migrated to enterprise-wide use after 9/ll—now the entire organization is speeding communications, collaboration and business processes via online meetings and training.
CORPORATE HEADQUARTERS: WebEx Communications, Inc., 3979 Freedom Circle, Santa Clara, CA 95054 USA Tel: +1.408.435.7000 Fax: 1.408.496.4353 ©2005 WebEx Communications, Inc. All rights reserved. All other trademarks are the property of their respective owners. WebEx and the WebEx logo are registered trademarks of WebEx Communications, Inc. SS-GMAC-101005
The Results
The quantitative results realized from GMACCM’s WebEx installation have been unprecedented. Morris’s team has repeat-edly delivered company-wide trainings for major system upgrades in as little as three weeks—processes that previously required several months to execute. “We developed a cost-to-benefit analysis in 2001 that showed we were saving $3,500 in costs per trained employee per year – resulting in over 12 million dollars a year in savings,” says Morris. If the analysis had included all the other groups that were using WebEx at this time, this figure would probably have been doubled.”
WebEx’s qualitative benefits have also been substantial, with virtually every GMACCM employee relying on WebEx to help them train rapidly, communicate with team members quickly, and get their jobs done more efficiently. According to Morris, “We are slashing travel costs throughout our organization. Business units are train-ing across business lines, our technology trainings can happen online instead of offsite, and our sales teams are getting in front of more customers without wast-ing time and money flying from place
We gave [our employees] the option of taking trainings via in-person classes, or online with WebEx. The first WebEx users immediately asked for all their training content to be delivered online—they didn’t want in-person trainings anymore.— Sandra Morris, Vice President, Learning and Employee Development
to place.” GMACCM has even adopted WebEx to deliver help desk support, enabling real-time viewing of remote desk-tops and the ability to share applications and teach end users on new products.
“We use WebEx to tell us how our prod-ucts are doing,” says Morris. “I use the polling feature to not only check reten-tion, but to get the user’s opinion on the product. I want to know if it’s valuable to them, if they see themselves using it, and how it can help them work better. This feedback filters throughout the organiza-tion and business units can make better decisions about the tools and applications we choose to deploy.”
WebEx has migrated to virtually all parts of the GMACCM organization, with individual groups focusing on the features that best facilitate their needs. “Our sales teams are using the recording function to establish their own library of sales training materials for on demand access,” says Morris. “Our Risk Management group is doing some-thing similar. We had a team of lawyers that met every week, literally flying in from every part of the globe. Now they use WebEx, saving time and costs, while still getting the job done.”
The Future Morris definitely sees WebEx continu-ing to be an integral part of GMACCM’s culture and ability to do business. Future applications include adding more con-tent to its training library for on demand access. “We’re a small staff,” Morris says, “and we’re frankly running out of time to prepare all the content for the number of business applications we’re now training on. We want to establish an on demand library of WebEx sessions that will help us meet this need without adding head-count.”
Morris adds, “There is no way we could have done all we’ve done without WebEx. Our peers in sister organizations ask us how we handle training rollouts at the speeds WebEx enables. They’re blown away by it. It has made our lives very sim-ple and made our team look very good.”
The instructor comes prepared to teach Plan A with Plan B and Plan C in place. — 240
Willingness to support learners via email and/or phone before and after sessions. — 240
3. Choose instructors with the right knowledge and skills
The instructor has a basic understanding of the Internet, word processing, and email. — 240
The instructor has some background or experience in teaching or training. — 240
The instructor has an understanding of instructional design for synchronous online.- 240
4. Take into account other considerations when choosing instructors
The instructor has good Internet access at work or home (depending on where they intend on doingthe most work on the course). — 240
The instructor has significant time available to devote to course development and to complete initial drafts of the course content at least 10 weeks prior to the course open date. — 240
The instructor is able to devote 10-15 hours per week to teaching the course for a 3-credit hourequivalent course (depending on the level of interaction and volume and length of assignments).— 240
B. Set the instructor up for success1. Ensure that there is organization support for synchronous e-Learning
Make sure you have top-down buy-in into any online learning initiatives; this will help you secureresources, including the necessary technical tools. — 25
Use champions to help increase the likelihood of successful adoption. — 25
Make online learning part of your overall learning programs. Have people in your company who canhelp and give advice to other learners. Integrate in-person training with online. Have as many formsof learning going on for as many subjects as possible. -109
Get your stakeholders involved, and keep them involved throughout the project, to ensure owner-ship and uptake of the product (important in academic settings). -255
2. Ensure there will be IT support
Have technical support available for participants. — 260
Provide off-line support, especially a technical support person so that the instructor is not spendingthe entire time diagnosing connection issues. — 288
834 Tips for Successful Online Instruction | 52
Don’t assumethat the prepa-ration and man-agement of e-Learning willtake less timethan traditionalforms of educa-tion!
Daniel Stanford,Instructional Designer,
The Savannah Collegeof Art and Design
III. Tips for Managers continued
3. Establish a complete delivery team
Have a co-presenter monitor participant activities. — 260
Use a producer. — 310
Use a producer when possible. The role of the producer is to take attendance, type on the whiteboard, check on AWOL participants, etc. — 161
If you are presenting through a Webcast, have a producer available to manage the software, instantmessaging, and assessments and surveys. — 179
Instructional Partnerships work better than solos as it give interaction and a lively social presence.— 188
Have a host or facilitator to assist with the live presentation to handle technical issues or respond tochat, etc. — 99
Multiple facilitators are a must! — two sets of eyes and ears are helpful on content and questions,but also the vocal variety helps the students from disengaging. Much like throwing in differentinteractive slides from time to time, different voices keep the students engaged. — 133
If you have a large audience, enlist the aid of another instructor if you need help managing text chatthat may be a part of the presentation. — 18
Have a second person to take care of chat questions or other things that might pop up. — 232
If the class is large have an assistant instructor to keep track of chat and technical difficulties of stu-dents. — 247
TEAM TEACH — having more than one facilitator in an online class allows the presenters to trade off ondifferent parts of the presentation, which helps to maintain student interest. It also offers students theopportunity to get one-on-one support for questions, and in the case of one instructor dropping off linedue to technical problems the other can step in and keep the program running. — 256
Use an assistant early on until you are comfortable with the technology. — 312
834 Tips for Successful Online Instruction | 53
Staff synchro-nous sessionswith two facili-tators; one tohandle thespeaking part,and one to han-dle incomingchat. Use thesecond instruc-tor to engage inconversation, ala the two-hosttalk radio for-mat.
Ceil Tilney, VicePresident, Linkage, Inc.
III. Tips for Managers continued
Learning can be enjoyable. Don’t be afraid to have some fun. — 34
Keep it simple. — 202, 203, 204
Keep it simple. Don’t overestimate your student’s e-skills. Take small steps. — 205
Keep it simple. Write in a conversational tone. Keep in touch with learners to prevent any feeling ofisolation. — 206
Keep it simple, keep it fun. — 207
Keep it simple. Use interactivity (not page turning) on every frame / page. Avoid lecture pages.— 208
Keep it simple. Make it fun, and interesting. Online is different from other forms of teaching. Don’tput a “book” online and expect it to teach. — 209
A. Apply these design tipsBuild a solid instructional design. Pay attention to detail during the development phase. — 105
Alpha & Beta test BEFORE release! — 105
Relying too heavily on assigned readings and book-based tutorials can leave students wishing theyhad saved their money by simply reading the required texts on their own. Give your e-Learningadded value with resources that go beyond the book, such as: interactive media and educationalgames, relevant and hard-to-find essays or articles, abridged study guides, printable quick-referenceguides, and organized lists with vital tips. Leverage the technology available to you to create uniqueassignments and promote collaboration. — 272
List procedures numerically, breaking up lengthy ones into different segments. — 13
Consider your audience! — 16
Blended is the magic word. — 29
Repurposing a classroom-based course for online delivery doesn’t work unless it’s redesigned for e-Learning. — 54
Be mindful of the diverse groups of learners and their learning needs. — 35
Be organized. — 38
Make sure your content is accurate. — 42
If your content is PowerPoint slides, include the notes — better yet — enriched notes. Otherwisethey are useless. — 43
834 Tips for Successful Online Instruction | 54
Allow for inter-activity of theusers (incorpo-rate quizzes,tips, movies, andgraphics).
Stephanie Sanford,Online Learning
Specialist, America’sSecond Harvest
IV. Tips for Design and Development Teams
Include asynchronous, self-paced opportunities to practice (review) in downloaded workshop con-tent. — 43
Don’t think that more animations and heavy images necessarily make courses of better quality.— 45
Prepare your PowerPoint slides very thoughtfully. — 49
Use relevant documents in addition to PowerPoint, to augment the subject matter. — 49
Assess student skills and tailor the course to accommodate the broad range of skills. — 54
Don’t forget to personalize the last slide. — 56
Design, design, design! Redesign your course from the beginning with the target number of stu-dents in mind. It’s much more difficult trying to add on or change approaches once the course hasstarted. — 57
Always inter-space learning with testing and summaries. — 19
Review materials for spelling, grammar, and flow. — 24
Tailor the training to the trainee and the company’s profile. — 33
Keep all subject matter precise. — 33
Know the desired outcome of your training — 33
Outline your work before you begin. — 50
Open your mind to creative ideas that may enter in the process of material development. — 50
Read your own copy as though you know nothing about the subject. — 50
Get a lot of external input, proofreading and editing. — 50
Remember always that your audience is giving up time from their busy lives to participate in thiscourse, so put thought into every word, keep it direct and empowering, and at the same time makeit fun. — 50
Always view your programs through the eyes of the end customer. — 71
Gauge the class size to the subject matter involved. — 72
In your design, build in ways to actively engage the learners. Otherwise, you might just as well makea video and send it out for people to watch. — 96
Chunk your material. — 111
834 Tips for Successful Online Instruction | 55
Think aboutyour students’profile. Theapproach is notthe same forstudents in ashort course runby a collegecompared to agroup of execu-tives doing anonline training.
Gabriela Sacco, V.O. &Associates. Education
and TrainingConsultants
IV. Tips for Design and Development Teams continued
Don’t assume stand-up PowerPoint slides equal online training. — 111
Do not let the aesthetics of screen design compete with the message of the learning event. — 123
Don’t create replacement books. — 127
Don’t get carried away by fancy plug-in routines, the main focus is the delivery of information nothow fancy the site appears. — 128
Don’t overlook email as an effective teaching aide. — 130
Easy navigation is the most critical. — 135
Do not get too caught up with static PowerPoint slides. There needs to be motion and action tomaintain attention. — 139
Establish good design practices so that the course is broken up into learning modules or contentchunks that are easy to absorb, but challenging. — 143
Prepare materials very differently — leverage what this mode can offer. Discard the stuff that mightwork very well in a classroom but which has no way of working in this mode. — 160
Make online sessions one tool in your blended delivery approach — not the only tool. — 164
From the management point of view it’s critical to establish common guidelines and approaches forall the online classes. You don’t want each instructor delivering in a totally different way when eachclass is part of a curriculum. Consistency can appear boring to the designers but is critical for thestudent. — 164
Pilot every new course before delivering to students. — 164
Have a good design on paper before you start actually committing your materials to the learningplatform / virtual learning environment. This design, if done properly, will certainly allow you seewhich tools you will need to use from the learning platform / VLE to get the best possible solutionfor your students and your company’s requirements. — 181
Increase your instructional integrity over classroom material through tight ISD concepts aimed atthe medium. — 188
The design of the learning is most crucial. — 297
Distance education instructional design is not a re-format of traditional classroom delivery: recog-nize the differences and embrace them. — 335
B. Provide support for learningPlan useful web site(s) to explore that are relevant to the e-Seminar content. — 49
834 Tips for Successful Online Instruction | 56
Be sure toaddress ADAcompliancyissues anddesign tech-niques.
Stevie Daniels,Coordinator Academic
Computing, Fresno CityCollege
IV. Tips for Design and Development Teams continued
If you have dull information to present, find ways to be creative. Use pictures or charts if possible.Use Flash presentations since they are more Web friendly. Find a vendor who can help you with thisif you do not have the abilities yourself. — 109
C. Make Forums a useful tool for learnersEncourage students to find new sources of information and share them with the class via discussionboards, online chat sessions, or web logs (blogs). Discussion threads and other online communica-tion forums can quickly get off topic and grow faster than teachers had anticipated. If use of discus-sion forums or other similar tools are a part of the grading criteria for a course, be sure to set clearexpectations for the quantity and quality of the information being exchanged. — 272
Design your question and discussion strategies. Do the math! 30 people posting something, andthen posting one response to someone else’s posting plus additional free responses = how manyposts to read ... how often? How will you monitor or check for understanding? — 287
D. Consider other tips (incl. advice and asynchronous items)Record the e-Seminar for many reasons including faculty playback for self improvement. — 49
Don’t consider a linear lecture / PowerPoint format an effective design for the synchronous class-room, or instructor-led classroom for that matter. — 15
For asynchronous events, make it easy for the learner to leave, and then return to the point of depar-ture later. Don’t force them to start at the beginning each time. — 18
If all you plan to do is narrate a PPT slide show without any adaptation, just record your voice, andpost that with your course. You’ve probably seen that this repels students, so don’t waste your timeor your student’s time. Have content that you can adapt. — 28
Use well-chosen media effectively. Don’t just use PowerPoint. — 30
Unless you have considerable instructional design experience in an e-Learning environment, don’ttry to design the course yourself. — 54
Keep the number of words on a page to the minimum. — 19
Be careful about what info is in each page — reduce instances of having to go back to previouspages for reference. — 19
Read any e-Course scripts aloud to ensure that they sound conversational. Minimize the amount oftext on e-Course pages and where possible, use graphics to summarize and emphasize key points.— 25
Include interactivity through games, simulations, and demonstrations followed by mini quizzes(Knowledge Checks), etc. — 25
834 Tips for Successful Online Instruction | 57
Build contentthat is not just aseries of linkedslides. Some ofyour users willdrift away if theone-size-fits-allmentality isapplied.
Al Moser, Support,ReadyGo, Inc.
IV. Tips for Design and Development Teams continued
WebEx Customer Success Story
During the initial rollout [of our $13 million Capital Connect project], we spent six months traveling to train users on the system. Now with WebEx, we can do the same in 30 days.— Michelle J. Brennan, Professional Development Consultant, Securian Advisor
Securian Financial Group accelerates business processes, speeds information delivery and improves quality of learning with WebEx.
Securian Financial Group is one of America’s leading providers of financial security for individuals and businesses, providing more than $430 billion of insurance protection and safeguarding approximately $24 billion of assets. Securian’s wide range of product and service offerings includes insurance policies, retirement plans, financial planning and invest-ment services. This 125-year old company works with an extended network of financial managers, agencies, and firms throughout the US to consistently bring quality products to its customers and maintain its top ratings.
The Challenge In 2003, Individual Business Technology, a Securian business unit performing sales software training, faced a critical challenge. The number of trainees flying in from around the country had increased by 60% while the facilities and equipment required for hands-on training remained fixed. Instead of the typical 20, groups of 50 or more people – includ-ing new asset managers, insurance agents and brokers – would come into the St. Paul headquarters for 3-4 business days. “I had an hour and a half to deliver hands-on training to the people who sell our products, but that no longer gave us enough time to provide a really useful, face-to-face interaction,” says Michelle J. Brennan, who trained the group at the time.
The Solution Brennan quickly realized that prerecording training sessions to view online could bet-ter prepare her students before they arrived, and would improve the quality of in-person class time at Securian. While researching several web presentation solutions, she came across the WebEx Presentation Studio and was impressed by the overall presentation and ease of use. Using Presentation Studio, Brennan began providing students with pre-recorded online training presentations that included built-in tests to help retain audi-
ence attention and determine areas requir-ing additional training. Students completed the activities before coming to an in-person training. “This allowed me to spend face-to-face time addressing students’ particular questions. If necessary, I could even assign them follow-up work through the Presentation Studio,” recalls Brennan.
Brennan was happy with the improvements resulting from using Presentation Studio, but she still wanted live e-learning capabil-ity to make training even more effective and interactive. Suspecting that other Securian divisions were probably facing similar training challenges, she shared her results across the enterprise. Other divisions were impressed with what WebEx had enabled Brennan to accomplish. Consequently, they partnered with her division to purchase a joint license for WebEx Meeting Center, Event Center, and Training Center. Use of the Presentation Studio was then discontinued in favor of live online training.
“WebEx was wonderful in our enterprise roll-out. They hosted specialized online training events for their applications,” says Brennan. WebEx solutions were adopted by more than seven divisions at Securian, including cor-porate law, professional development, policy services, and marketing. Some of the divi-sions even created branded WebEx internal meeting portals, from which they could col-laborate and train on their own schedules and in their own ways. Today, approximately 350 users at Securian host WebEx presentations for their customers.
The Securian Advisor Services Division, where Brennan now works, uses WebEx Training Center to deliver 15-20 interactive sales and marketing trainings to insurance firms and financial advisor groups on a monthly basis. They use a variety of Training Center tools such as quizzing and polling, animation, and
INDUSTRY Financial Services
WEBEX APPLICATIONS Presentation Studio, Training Center, Meeting Center
SUMMARY Securian Financial Group needed a more effective way to deliver trainings to a growing number of customers. By implementing WebEx throughout the enterprise, Securian was able to accelerate its customer communications and overall business processes using blended training methods. As a result, the organization speeded information delivery and significantly improved the overall quality of learning.
ABOUT SECURIAN Line of Business Financial security for individuals and businesses
Headquarters St. Paul, Minnesota
Number of Employees 5,000
WebEx Customer Since 2003
CORPORATE HEADQUARTERS: WebEx Communications, Inc., 3979 Freedom Circle, Santa Clara, CA 95054 USA Tel: +1.408.435.7000 Fax: 1.408.496.4353 ©2005 WebEx Communications, Inc. All rights reserved. All other trademarks are the property of their respective owners. WebEx and the WebEx logo are registered trademarks of WebEx Communications, Inc.
HIGHLIGHTS • Use of on-demand presentations outside of the classroom (in-person and virtual) pre-trained students and improved the quality of face-to-face meetings.
• Stellar outcome from the self-paced module use in one division resulted in enterprise-wide adoption of WebEx Training Center and Meeting Center.
• WebEx accelerated Securian business processes – speeding distribution and improving quality of information, increasing convenience for customers and making face-to-face time more valuable.
WebEx helps our customers view many trainings and presentations when they’re available. No more three-day trainings away from their offices. Delivering information in smaller doses and at the customer’s convenience improves retention of the material.— Michelle J. Brennan, Professional Development Consultant, Securian Advisor Services
whiteboards to ensure the sessions hold the audience’s attention. “Every three minutes, we make sure students are engaged by raising their hands, drawing on a white board, or typ-ing in answers,” explains Brennan. Other fea-tures, such as breakout sessions and hands on labs, further enhance the e-learning expe-rience. And Brennan makes recorded ses-sions available for people who can’t attend.
Instant sessions and desktop sharing in Training Center enable financial agents and advisors to call in and receive hands-on answers to urgent questions. “If an agent has a scheduled meeting with a client and comes across a glitch in his or her sales materi-als, we can respond by launching an instant Training Center session. Not only do we solve the problem immediately, but we turn the whole situation into a learning experience,” says Brennan.
Brennan’s division also uses WebEx Meeting Center for podium-style presentations and broadcast meetings in which new products are announced or strategic information delivered to Securian business partners, vendors and agencies. Brennan points out, “WebEx Meeting Center helps us keep the participants focused on our message when-ever we present an investment strategy for a new fund class.”
Securian once again supplements live meetings throughout the enterprise using Presentation Studio or the on-demand mod-ule of Training Center. On-demand sessions are particularly useful in delivering compliance trainings – such as NAIC (National Association of Insurance Commissioners) and long-term care – as well as mandatory corporate meet-ings. According to Brennan, “WebEx has the editing and recording tools we need to deliver fully polished presentations without the stops and starts common in live presentations. WebEx supports compliance by telling us who has registered and attended a specific training. We also use viewing times and testing to determine whether an attendee stayed through the presentation and is truly compliant.”
The Benefits With WebEx, Securian improved its enterprise business processes by implementing a whole new approach to collaboration and train-ing. As a result, the organization significantly improved the quality of information distributed to its customers while providing more effec-tive delivery methods. According to Brennan, “WebEx helps us to get information to people a lot quicker than in the past. And it enables us to deliver information consistently. We no longer have multiple teams delivering different messages to our customers.”
The impact of WebEx can clearly be seen in the rollout of Securian’s 13-million dollar Client Connect project, their client data manage-ment system. “During the initial rollout, we spent six months traveling to train users on the system. Now with WebEx, we can do the same in 30 days,” explains Brennan. Her division is responsible for training 65 general agencies, including some that handle indi-vidual needs such as retirement and insur-ance. “In rolling out the new system, we’ve been able to decrease our travel budget significantly because of WebEx. Our time and budget are better allocated these days. Travel to client sites is still important, but we can deliver a lot more information without having to travel all the time.”
Securian now uses WebEx to provide cus-tomers with a more convenient and useful way of learning. “WebEx helps our customers view many trainings and presentations when they’re available. No more three-day trainings away from their offices. Delivering information in smaller doses and at the customer’s con-venience improves retention of the material,” says Brennan.
Enterprise-wide, Securian has now adopted a blend of training that combines online presen-tations with in-person classrooms—making face-to-face meetings as valuable as pos-sible. “We use the online presentations to get everyone on the same page before they enter the classroom,” says Brennan.
The Future The impact of WebEx has caused Brennan to begin exploring new revenue models and applications. “We want to begin reselling our WebEx license to our close partners. One key partner, a financial planning firm with offices all over the US, has already expressed interest,” says Brennan. Her division is also looking into the WebEx e-commerce module to facilitate payment for customer training.
Another goal is to make more sophisticated use of the system’s robust capabilities across the enterprise. Plans include using WebEx Sales Center for new product teams and leveraging Training Center’s hands-on lab and breakout room features to provide more focus during trainings. Brennan would also like to see growing proficiency with on-demand sessions, using more advanced editing and video, for instance. “WebEx has allowed us to come such a long way with the efficiency and quality of our training. We know our users are happy with the results. So we want to keep incorporating more WebEx applications to help us continue to improve.”
SS-SECURIAN-112105
Provide thorough guidance and share Best Practices with SMEs who have not previously worked inan online environment. — 25
Build content that has multiple navigation paths (e.g. articles with more detail) and tables of contents to skip to the material of interest. — 28
“Talk” with students through your materials. While developing material’s contents, think as if youwere actually talking to students. — 45
Sit back and review your work every three scenes or slides to gain perspective and to check if you’reon the right path. — 52
Choose images that follow a theme, e.g. a color theme, an object theme (all office stationery), etc.— 52
Avoid line after line of text. Students soon grow bored and the instructional message gets lost. Usegraphics, non-offensive humor, and interaction (questions, drag-and-drop, etc.) to keep the onlinetraining interesting. — 78
Build it small — because Learning Content Management Systems (LCMSs) are what the future holdsfor online designers. — 106
Divide in small pieces, as much as you can, all the instructional objectives you are pursuing in yourcourse, and make LOs with them. Try to think like some one that does not know anything about thematter you are trying to teach him. — 122
Have more than one way for learners to learn your content. Some people may never let go of thepaper so have it available, but connect it to online. At least make them go to a Web site to print outthe assignment or to check their answers. — 109
Put everything in one place — an LMS or Web site at least — so people do not have to hunt for theonline learning. They will quickly quit looking. — 109
Create templates and reuse them, like learning objects. — 118
Keep it short and deliver very small snippets of information because no one in the business worldhas hours to spend taking online courses. Build on prior learning. Make it easy to access and avail-able 24/7. — 201
Create an environment that facilitates the student locating information easily. — 147
Explore the Savie handbooks. — 150
Use Michael Allen’s approach to stamp out boring e-Learning. — 236
Decide on your design early in the project. — 255
834 Tips for Successful Online Instruction | 60
Use lots of sim-ple, yet effec-tive, animationsinstead of fewer heavieranimations! Anexample of asimple anima-tion would be to use a mag-nifying glasseffect to high-light importantwords, or toshow fluctua-tions of valuesin a table orgraph.
Salma Jafri, LeadInstructional Designer,
360Training
IV. Tips for Design and Development Teams continued
Construct a Venn diagram of the face-to-face and online versions of your course. What do you see? Ifyou were to design a hybrid version, how would you decide what would be addressed in whichvenue? Map it. — 287
Simple navigation (3 clicks), include automated feedback and reusable learning objects. — 285
834 Tips for Successful Online Instruction | 61
Ensure youronline programshave gonethrough thor-ough usabilitytesting.
Bruce Karr, TrainingConsultant, Amex
Canada Inc.
IV. Tips for Design and Development Teams continued
A. Manage the class sizeKeep classes small. — 90
Limit the audience size depending on what you are trying to do. If your presentation is nothing morethan a knowledge dump or demo, you may be able to get by with larger audiences. However, if youare seeking interaction with the learners, and learner interaction with the content, you need to keepclass size smaller. If you need to reach more people, give more classes. (For example, when teachingsoftware or business applications, talking about it is OK, demonstrating it is better, but giving thema chance to drive is best. You can’t give them the chance to drive if your class size is too large.) — 18
Keep the class load to a size that is manageable. More than twelve students at a time per instructoris a lot to handle, even with an LMS. — 156
B. Manage the class lengthA synchronous, interactive e-Seminar should not be less than or more than two hours. — 49
Limit the length of the synchronous session. I try not to go over two hours. — 18
Ensure that your time keeping is vigilant — the longer the lesson, the greater the chance that par-ticipants will lose concentration. — 67
Chunk sessions into delivery time frames of no more than one hour. — 32
Limit content to what is needed; do not add extra information that will extend the session. Forextended sessions (lasting longer than 90 minutes): Give breaks. Think about breaking session apartinto smaller learning modules or chunks. — 153
If you have a long topic, chunk it up. No single online session should be hours and hours in length.— 184
Keep it short — 2 hours is too long. — 190
You need more frequent breaks for online sessions ... try not to go more than an hour before takinga break. — 336
Develop a timeline for each session — however remember it is more important that you ensurelearning occurs than it is to complete delivery of all the intended material. In my experience, if a
V. Tips for Implementation
course has multiple sessions, although some sessions may go slow, others go fast and in the end itall seems to even out. — 223
C. Provide an effective physical setup for the instructorHave the right tools, equipment and space for the instructor. It’s impossible to be an online instruc-tor from your cubicle!! — 164
Deliver synchronous training in an environment free from distractions, i.e. your cubicle may not bethe best place; we have a small room dedicated for this purpose. — 18
Eliminate interruptions from office colleagues and telephone calls during participation in an onlineinstruction session. — 223
Carefully arrange your screen with all the shortcuts and needed materials readily at hand. — 176
Use sound to your advantage — invest in a soundboard, music tracks, and other audio aids. — 188
Only teach from a private room. Have a raised desk so you can walk around while you teach. — 247
834 Tips for Successful Online Instruction | 62
Use a graphicspad instead of amouse. It speedsup highlightingand freeformtext writing andimproves theprofessionallook.
Bob Schaefer, Director,Product Management,
TEDS, Inc.
V. Tips for Implementation continued
VI. MiscellaniaDon’t rely on fancy technologies such as a screen sharing (WebEx) system. Corporate firewalls willfrequently kill these. — 28
Be creative. Don’t let technology drive your development. Bells and Whistles don’t make the learningbetter. — 85
Be in touch with emerging technologies. — 89
Careful of VOIP — could distort audio. — 153
Technology is still evolving. — 296
Any communication problem is unrelated to differences in goal orientation. — 6
Plans are nothing — preparation is everything. — 55
Student comprehension is the key to learning and application of knowledge. — 41
Don’t be overwhelmed. — 42
Continue doing what you do best, teaching. — 42
Forget thinking in terms of regular “classes.” Most instructors tend to think that an online videotapedclass equals a face-to-face class. Instead, think in terms of the content you want to teach! — 45
When you hear ... you forget. When you see ... you remember. When you do ... you understand. -1
A danger in uninformed use of technology associated with web-based course delivery is shapingteaching and learning activities to fit the technology rather than using an appropriate technologythat fits the activity.“The medium too often assumes a life of its own, supplanting the teacher andresulting in technology-bound activities that are debilitating to both teaching and learning (Parker,1997 p. 9).” — 5
Online learning needs to be easy to use, engaging and interactive — if you achieve this, the rest willprobably follow without too much difficulty. It is much more effective as an integral part of a blend-ed approach — it shouldn’t stand alone. In my current role, we use e-Learning to train level 1 basicskills and manage to engage people with no previous qualifications, language or learning difficultiesetc. These guidelines do work!! — 268
Remember that there is a life outside the computer. — 51
A good computer user is not someone who knows everything there is to know about computers. Agood computer user is someone who can work out how to make the computer assist in the task athand, and then identify the most efficient way of accomplishing it. — 59
Arrogance is ignorance. — 75
Always be on your toes to learn more about e-Learning and be able to deploy it. — 64
It has to be easy, fun, worth their time. What is in it for them? The online learning has to make thelearner think. Not all movies make people think. Whatever technology you have, use it to make peo-ple think about the subject. What should they do with this information? How can their skill beimproved? Answer those questions in the online training. — 109
It is very important to understand the challenges of a totally online instructional model. These chal-lenges can be in terms of technology, diverse audience profile (experience and motivation levels),cultural diversity, training domain complexity, and so on. The trick is to relate the online model witha classroom situation, and think of parallel methods in the online context for meeting the abovestated challenges. — 194
Any instructor who is a good face-to-face instructor will migrate easily to the online forum. Theyalready have the attributes that are required to facilitate learning. — 156
Good communication skills (verbal and written) are vital. — 159
Patience is a virtue. — 159
Go to the point. Make the point a vehicle for deeper digging. Put the point in context and position itin today’s worldly context. Don’t preach, but lead the way forward. — 158
One person can make a difference!
Online learning does NOT have to be boring!!! — 246
834 Tips for Successful Online Instruction | 63
VI. Miscellania continuedEnthusiasm is anecessary com-ponent of learn-ing how to dothings right.
Vic Divecha, eLearningSpecialist, School of
Public Health
Design and develop the full course (all learning activities) in advance of the term startup — thenconcentrate on facilitating it. — 253
Sometimes the tips are imperatives, other times they are reflective questions — 287
Realize that people prefer synchronous events so that they can multi-task (participate and: eat, read,check email, check voice mail, play games, daydream, etc.). Many do it just to be able to tell othersthey did it without gaining any real benefit. — 338
Developing competencies is good, but not necessarily for certification. They would just be good inand of themselves. — 338
The right amount of information, for the time allotted, delivered in the right way, for the right rea-son, aligned with the right deliverables. — 298
Teach for your students, not the medium. — 294
These are largely from a participant’s point of view: Never assume anything. A program’s designermay mean it to be intuitive, but it may only be intuitive to the person who designed it. Be awarealways of the additional barrier the computer interface places between instructor and student orthe student and learning material. — 302
If it doesn’t do it for you, get offline — not every content works online!
834 Tips for Successful Online Instruction | 64
If there is some-thing you coulddo to improveyour coursenow, do it now.Don’t wait untilthe next timeyou offer it.Power toolsenable you tomake mistakesfaster!
Mark Joyce, Professorof Education, Mesa
State College
VI. Miscellania continued
1 Ayyanathan S.Natarajan, Lecturer &Systems Analyst, Madurai KamarajUniversity
2 Mark Jermyn, Senior CoursewareDeveloper, Cypress
3 Sue Sarcheck, Lead Business Analyst,Federal Reserve Bank ofPhiladelphia
4 Robert Salazar, e-Learning WebDeveloper, Dynamic-iBuilder, Inc.
5 Steve Swinson, Northrop Grumman6 Alan Guinn, Managing Director, The
Guinn Consultancy Group, Inc7 Joseph Tansey, Manager of
Corporate Synchronous /Asynchronous Delivery Systems,Wells Fargo Corporate Learning andDevelopment
8 Andra Zamacona9 Mark Bucceri, Principal Education
Specialist, Centra10 Vieva Steele, Manager, Training
Development, ADP11 Melissa Leaist, Community Health &
Education Specialist, CAMH12 MaryAlice Colen, VP eLearning,
Interwise13 Stephanie Sanford ,Online Learning
Specialist, America’s Second Harvest14 Herb McCartney ,LMS
Administrator, Tyco Healthcare15 Nancy Miller, On-Line Learning
Manager, UnumProvident16 Becky Harris, Director of
Instructional Design, Purple MonkeyStudios
17 Rajesh Lele, Deputy Head, E-learn-ing, Bank of Baroda
18 Roy Batzel, Technical Trainer, TimeWarner Telecom
19 Ayutila Aier, Instructional Designer,CIFT Ltd.
21 Ivy Satre, Software Trainer, FarmBureau Financial Services, Inc.
22 Bill Thimmesch, Training Specialist,US Dept. of Labor-ETA
23 Michelle Walker, InstructionalDesigner, Westfield Insurance
24 Gaylene Galliford,SupervisorTraining, Design &Development, Apria Healthcare
25 Nicole McGuire, Training ProgramsManager, LexisNexis
26 Josephine Murray, Director, PelionConsulting Pty Ltd
27 Marcia Ward, Sr. Editor, Dearborn(Kaplan Professional)
28 Al Moser, Support, ReadyGo, Inc.29 Dr. Jasir Alherbish, BCT30 Rajit Anand, Executive Vice
President Delivery, Hurix SystemsPvt. Ltd.
31 Fran Dunne, Inovis32 Robert Hails, Director, Center for
Distance Learning, College ofEngineering, University of Arkansas
33 Cheryl Reesy, Education Coordinator,First National Bank and Trust
34 Faun deHenry, President, BusinessIntelligence / Data Warehouse SIG
35 Sheryl Wong, Sr. Asst Director(Faculty Dev), NanyangTechnological University, Singapore
36 Leslie Stompor, Sr. InstructionalDesigner, Siebel Systems
37 Melinda Medina, Program Chair,University of Phoenix OnlineCampus
38 Sandi Sturm, e-Learning Designer /Instructor / Owner, CreativeConservation
39 Bhanu Kiran Potta, NIIT Limited40 Jahna Kahrhoff, Dir. Academic Dist.
Learning Center, Webster University41 Rhamy Morrison, Training Specialist,
American Standard / Trane RS
42 Michael Drummond, Ph.D., Directorof Instructional Technology, MercerUniversity
43 Karen Gordon-Brown, InstructionalSolutions Designer, San FranciscoBay Area Rapid Transit District
44 Lee Karns, Chief Bottle Washer,Vertical View Software Associates
45 Gabriela Sacco, V.O. & Associates.Education and Training Consultants
46 Colleen ONeil, CLO, Alva LearningSystems
47 Michael Ciambella, Director, GenesisHealthcare Corp
48 Christopher Harding,Documentation & TrainingSpecialist, Vasogen, Inc.
49 Beth Warren, President & CEO,WorkWorlds’ Human ResourceCorporation
50 Maggie Marsh-Nation, R. EEG/EPT,CNIM, American Soc. of ENDTechnologists
51 Kathryn Williams, WesthoughtonHigh School
52 Salma Jafri, Lead InstructionalDesigner, 360Training
53 Robin Roumeliotis, Director of ClientSupport and Training, Spectra
54 Gayle Rooke, President,KeyMedia Inc.
55 Harold Cypress, National LearningLeader, Deloitte
56 Jeff Tyson, Manager of MultimediaDevelopment, Tech Resource Group,Inc.
57 Mark Veljkov, VP, Education OnLine,Inc.
58 Francois Ronai, Consultant,Perfoption Inc.
59 Timothy Lambert, Coordinator ofInstructional Support, Bunker HillCommunity College
834 Tips for Successful Online Instruction | 65
VII. Thanks to Our Tipsters
60 John Lachman, PBSO61 Norman Lamont62 Wendy Brunner, Director of
Courseware Production, MEBN63 Vic Divecha, eLearning Specialist,
School of Public Health64 Renu Vadhvani, Elearning
Consultant, Infosys65 Penny Gelb, Manager of Systems
Training, BJ’s Wholesales Club66 Matthew Masci, Co-ordinator E-
learning, RACQ67 Helen Thompson, Wholesaling Ops
Training Co-ordinator, HeatcraftAustralia Pty Ltd
68 Dennis DeLaurier, Web Based train-ing developer, Input / Output Inc
69 Carol Davies, Research Officer,United Nations
70 Jun Yang, Instructional TechnologySpecialist, Harrisburg CommunityCollege, IT Center
71 Tom Steele, Director, Soft LearnInteractive
72 Angela Johnson-Terry, TechnicalTrainer, The Analysis Corporation
73 Michael Havice, Associate Professor,Broadcast & ElectronicCommunication, MarquetteUniversity
74 Oliver Thompson, EducationConsultant, Hewlett-PackardEducation Services
75 Peter Palme, Trainer & ElearningSpecialist, Nestec S.A.
76 Mary Duggan, Director of LearningTechnology, Learning andCommunications
77 Julie Biddle, Technology TrainingCoordinator, Ontario Ministry ofMunicipal Affairs & Housing
78 William Mihalovits, Instructor,Progress Energy Carolinas, Inc.
80 Tuula Piispanen-Krabbe, Trainingand Development Specialist, Stateof NM Dept. of Health
81 Lisa Wieland Handy, AVP / Sr.Consultant, Mellon
82 Paul Weber, Vice President, OMIC83 Bernice Glenn, Principal, Glenn &
Associates84 Enrique Garcia, Director, Employees
Technology Advancement Center,Laredo Community College
85 Dennis DiMambro, AVP,Putnam Investments
86 Martijn Bakker, NA87 Susan McMurray, Performance
Consultant, Titan Corporation88 A. Lynn Raiser, Principle Instructional
Designer, Siebel Systems, Inc.89 Seethalakshmi Natarajan, Tata
Interactie Systems90 Cindi Freedman, Assistant Vice
President, New York Life Insurance91 Sharon Valencia, Adjunct Professor,
Bellevue University92 Jim Formosa, Assoc Professor,
Nashville Community College93 Jennifer Jewett-Kelly, Sr. Analyst,
Caremark94 Marie Rustemeyer, Manager,
Educational Service District 10195 Mark Siegrist, Senior Instructional
Designer, Vertex Inc.96 Elaine Keller, E-learning Manager,
Battelle97 Jeroen Spierings, Business
Development Manager, BT98 Kathleen Kanzer-Johnson, National
Training Director, BP99 David Sweeney, Manager, ISD /
Training, TRG, Inc.100 Paul Shiroma, Solution Architect,
New Horizons
101 Andrea Barrett, Director Informationand Learning Services, Learnpros
102 Rhonda Goetz, InstructionalDesigner, Chrome Zebra Academy
103 Tom Berry, Galileo Systems, LLC104 Man Van, Lecturer, Amsat105 Marie Ortiz, Staff Development
Specialist, Kansas Department ofSocial and Rehabilitation Services
106 Bob Pederson, Manager, Learningand Development, State FarmInsurance Companies
107 David McClelland, eLearningSpecialist, Eastman Kodak
108 Matt Lewis, Instructional Designer,ESHconnect, Inc.
109 Jeffrey Riley, IS Training Coordinator,Palmer & Cay
110 Michele Largman, Trainer elearningdevelopment, J&JPRD
111 Charisse Bellamy, Senior e-LearningConsultant, TIAA-CREF
112 Susan Gawley, eLearning Manager,Deloitte & Touche
113 Peter S. Cookson, Director, Centre forEducation and InformationTechnology, University for Peace, ofthe United Nations
114 Mary Nicholson, Professor,Bloomsburg University
115 Sue Pysher, Training Coordinator,PSU Electronic & Computer Services
116 Siva Kiran, Trina117 Leah Folkestad118 Meredith Esposito, President, E-
learning at Work LLC119 Meg Louthan, Business Consultant,
UnitedHealthcare120 Kathleen Hueser, Principal ISD, UDLP
ASD Army Training121 Beverly Wood, Professor, USC122 J. A. Fung, Professor, UCI
834 Tips for Successful Online Instruction | 66
VII. Thanks to Our Tipsters continued
123 Nitin Nimkar, Consultant, N. V.Nimkar
124 Linda Wathen, ImplementationCoordinator, Mediaplex
125 Vanessa Ratliff, Consultant, VadaraHoldings LLC
126 Tim Martin, Training Manager, Intel127 James Oates, TAFE Tasmania128 Richard Cowles, Senior Consultant,
Prescient Digital Media130 Glenna Shaw, Internal Consultant,
OCC131 Joe Jones, President, Business
Builders132 Francis Rabuck, President, Rabuck
Associates133 Rob Stogsdill, Analyst, State Farm134 Jane Mullooly, Manager, Technical
Training, Eisai Medical Research135 Dr.Gary Coldevin, Coldevin
International136 Jake Edmondson, eLearning
Architect, Memec137 Elizabeth Brock, e.Learning Product
Manager, Siemens Health Services138 Anna Peters, Learning Performance
Coordinator, BP139 Chris Bond, President, Bluewater
Interactive Consulting Group140 Wassim Subie, Instructional
Technologist, Cornerstone Industry,Inc.
141 C. Schmidt, Learning Consultant,Caterpillar University
142 Sherry Larson, IS Developer, NWA143 Raymond Truitt, Curriculum Design
and Development Manager, Sears144 Guy Levert, President, elearn-
ingstyles.com145 Bruce Karr, Training Consultant,
Amex Canada, Inc.
146 Ken Huffman, LearningTechnologist, Saudi Aramco
147 Jennafer Kuhns, Associate, BoozAllen Hamilton
148 Bernadette Floyd, LearningManager, Hudson Global Resources
149 Caryl Bender, Director ofInstructional Technology, Collegis /Brookdale Community College
150 Mathy Vanbuel Managing Director,ATiT
151 Cheryl McNeil, Online Instructor,Mercer County Community College
152 Jeff Albers, Senior Technical Writer,Mirant
153 Dan Lickteig, Training andCommunications Manager, Procterand Gamble
154 Helga Ernst, Instructional Designer,Plante Moran
155 Megan Bennett, OD/ID Specialist,ATX Communications
156 Murray Gerein, Distance LearningCoordinator, Royal CanadianArtillery School
157 Robin McCord, LearnMWR Manager(Civilian), U.S. Navy Morale, Welfareand Recreation Division
158 Erik Wallin, Associate Professor, LundUniversity
159 Jim Robson, Principal, Scottish FireServices College
160 Manasvini Prasad, Practice HeadInstruction Design, Trina
161 Mary Gutwein, Learning Specialist,Humana Military HealthcareServices
162 Chris Green, Systems Administrator,S.C. Johnson and Son, Inc.
163 Nori Morita, Training Specialist,MDSI Mobile Data Solutions, Inc.
164 Bob Schaefer, Director, ProductManagement, TEDS, Inc.
165 Ashley Rice, Manager, InternalTraining Solutions, WebEx
167 Roger D (Dave) Braun, Learning &Performance Support StandardsSupervisor, SaskPower
168 James (Jim) Wainwright, Inspector,Hartford Steam Boiler
169 Madeline Usera, Project Manager.Learning Technologies, ATF (govern-ment)
170 Jean Marrapodi, Senior EducationSpecialist, Private HealthcareSystems
173 Jim Swan, Training Consultant, TheHartford
174 Lee Soon Leong, OperationsManager, HP
176 Kit Horton, VP, William HortonConsulting
177 Paula Cancro, IS Training Specialist,Independent Financial MarketingGroup (IFMG)
178 Suzanne Carlstedt, HR Specialist, IRS179 Sondra Hack, IT Training Specialist,
Highmark180 Jacqui Kelly, Educational Designer,
Curtin University of WesternAustralia
181 Steve Wileman, InstructionalDesigner, MANCAT
182 Kate MacDonald, Director ofInstructional Design Services,Massachusetts College of Pharmacyand Health Sciences
183 Rishi Surtani, Instructional Designer184 Tricia Luke, Staff Technical Training
Specialist, QUALCOMM, Inc.185 Ron Miazga, Dir. Learning Services,
Univar USA186 Aina Irbe, Training Team Lead,
Zerone, Inc.187 Brian Duck, Instructional Designer,
Ford Motor Company
834 Tips for Successful Online Instruction | 67
VII. Thanks to Our Tipsters continued
188 Max Butler, Lead Instructor,Honeywell
189 Dawn Ray, Sales Consultant, ADPScreening and Selection Services
190 Bill Leber, Support Engineer, AgilentTechnologies, Inc.
191 Ralph Hausman, Ph.D., Private con-tracting (Retired UniversityProfessor)
192 Brian Popken, President,Pinneast.com
193 Paul Bejgrowicz, Assistant Director,eLearning, Johnson & JohnsonPharmaceutical Research &Development
194 Joseph Chinnaya, InstructionalDesigner, Gecis Content Solutions
195 Robert Cross, President, sohobiz.ca196 Greg Younger, Mgr. of Product
Development, TrainingOnline197 Jeff Duncan, Assistant Principal,
Douglas S. Freeman High School198 Renee Drake, MS Ed., Online
Teaching and Learning; DistanceLearning Technician, College of theCanyons
199 Russ Weddle, Consultant, ChaddeCustom Computing
200 Fiona Quigley, Director ofOperations, Aurion Limited
201 Gail Gannon, Team Leader, PioneerHybrid
202 Pam Hebert, Project manager, EES203 Mike Ricard, Consultant, Freelance204 Cheri Toledo, Asst. Professor, Illinois
State University205 Gerard Corcoran, Manager e
Initiatives, OLI206 John Rhodes, Senior Lecturer,
Durban Institute of Technology207 Hermann Green, ODOC208 Nancy Gillies, RN, Education
Specialist, BayCare Health Services
209 Daniel Van Blarcom, Captain,Whitsunday Community Services
210 Dianne Calhoun, InstructionalDesign Senior Analyst, Accenture
211 Elwood (Woody) Say, eLearningDevelopment Manager, XeroxGlobal Services
212 Benjamin Kolt, InstructionalDesigner, National City Corporation
213 Sam Taylor, Project Manager,Tresham Institute
214 Heather Karimi, Program Manager,Intellinex
215 Karin Albert, Educational R&DLeader, Granite Construction, Inc.
216 Thomas Macaulay, InstructionalDesigner, IBM
217 Bob Joyce, Coordinator ofContinuing Ed., Center forBiosecurity & Public HealthPreparedness
218 Stuart Flatow, VP, Safety & Training,Propane Education & ResearchCouncil
219 Randy Cowling, MultimediaDesigner, New World RestaurantGroup
220 JoAnn Escobedo, eLearningDeveloper, Waste Management
221 Donna Welschmeyer, Director,Online Program Development,Colorado Community CollegesOnline
222 Michael Laudone, Sr. ID223 RJ Ferguson224 P Deepika, Manager, MBT225 Sheldon Fisher, Performance
Management Consultant, AppliedPerformance
226 David Brand, Learning Specialist, 3M227 Norma Grassini-Komara,
Instructional Designer, MoraineValley Community College
228 Susan Sheehan, Content Developer,The Yacobian Group
229 Deborah Chadwick, InstructionalDesigner, Cisco Systems
230 Dr. Diane Kramer, CEO, PeakSkillsLearning Systems
231 Ken Steinman, Manager, O.D., TheRegence Group
232 Adam McDaniel, Training Manager,Dentrix Dental Systems, Inc.
233 Nicole Dalton, InstructionalDesigner, First Citizens Bank
234 Alexa Simon, MEAG Munich ERGOKAG
235 Don Wren, eLearning Designer,SaskTel Mobility
236 Lucendia Halliday, Project Manager,Ford Motor Co.
237 Susan Clark, Learning Coordinator,Stantec Consulting Ltd.
238 Rakesh Poddar, Instructor Designer,IBM India
239 Curtis Bond, Night Director, High-Tech Institute
240 Tamara (Tammy) Christensen,Director, Online Learning, ASAE andThe Center for AssociationLeadership
241 Phil Wakefield, Stockport College242 Barbara Toney, AIS Application
Services Manager, UniGroup243 Linda Grubbs, Instructional
Designer, Kaiser Permanente244 Dr. Fatima Mahieddine, Bradford
University245 Shaik ilyas, Globarena Web
Technologies, Hyderabad, India246 Angel Bryan, Corporate Trainer,
Sharonview Federal Credit Union247 Jennifer Hall, Instructional Designer,
ACNielsen249 Lee Davidson, Associate Professor of
Teacher Ed., Andrews University
834 Tips for Successful Online Instruction | 68
VII. Thanks to Our Tipsters continued
250 John Shultz, Project Manager, CACI251 Mike Tillmans, Asst. Professor,
Illinois Institute of Technology252 Luca Botturi, Ph.D., NewMine Lab,
University of Lugano253 Judith Fisher, Director, Instructional
Support, University of Florida,Warrington College of Business
254 Stacy Moore, PerformanceConsultant, TIAA-CREF
255 Tanya Wolfe, Southbank Institute256 Michael Shawn Stiles, Training
Project Manager, Pfizer Inc.257 Faiyaaz258 Kevin Balog, Ed.D., SPHR, Professor /
Faculty Mentor, Central MichiganUniversity
259 Patricia Fischer, Technical Training &Curriculum Development Manager,Foley & Lardner
260 Barbara Fillicaro261 Betty Johnson, Sr. Instructional
Design Specialist, SecuritiesAmerica, Inc.
262 Jan Buhmann263 Paula Bradshaw, Manager of
Instructional Design, Inter-Tel, Inc.264 Kay Dixon, Sr. Courseware
Developer, Siebel Systems265 Steve Sieberts, Instructional
Developer, Kentucky Department forPublic Health
266 Frank Yamson, eLearning Specialist /Consultant, Scotiabank
267 Dan Hill, Manager, Training &Education, Group HealthCooperative
268 Alison Goldup, IT Training Matters269 Teresa Nash, Database
Administrator, Exelon Nuclear270 Trudy Kennell, Curriculum Developer
And Editor, AlphaPlus Centre271 Satish Ingale, PL, HSBC
272 Daniel Stanford, InstructionalDesigner, The Savannah College ofArt and Design
273 David Dubin, Senior CurriculumDeveloper, Best Software, Inc.
274 Sylvia Dribnak, Learning Specialist,CIBC
275 Maureen Hart, Senior Manager,Medco Health
276 Angie Vazquez, E-Learning ProjectManager, Hallmark Cards
277 Craig Jackson, E-learning Specialist,Research and Curriculum Unit
278 Patricia Keithan, InstructionalDesigner, Training Designs
279 Heather Petit, Manager, TechnologyAssisted Learning, Bristol-MyersSquibb
280 James Genovese, President, Pro-Ware Computing, Inc.
281 Nancy Berger, Training andOrganizational EffectivenessManager, Genworth Financial
282 Stevie Daniels, CoordinatorAcademic Computing, Fresno CityCollege
283 Gene Holden, InstructionalDesigner, Stanford LinearAccelerator Center
284 Pam Henchar, Manager ofCurriculum Development, AlteerCorporation
285 C. Fisher, Technology ProjectManager, St. Petersburg College
286 Marc Shecter, Project Manager,Agilent Technologies
287 Mark Joyce, Professor of Education,Mesa State College
288 Jill Hughes, Instructional Designer288 Ernie Tor, Sr. Instructional Designer,
Cingular Wireless289 Veronica Diaz, Learning
Technologies Manager, University ofArizona
290 Paul Dattoli, Technology Engineer,Consultant
291 Godfrey Parkin, MindRise292 Ning Zhang, Training and
Development Manager, UnitedOnline
293 Bruna Ori, Tech IntegrationSpecialist, HPHS
294 Lionel Thomas, Freelance Educator,Own Business
295 Amy Reichert, InstructionalDeveloper, Quad/Graphics
296 Victoria Walker, CurriculumTechnology Support Coordinator,Regent University
297 Arthur Wakefield, Lead TechnicalAnalyst, Carlson Hotels Worldwide
298 Jan Donley, Corporate Director,Learning, Catholic HealthcarePartners
300 Meg Yanalunas, InstructionalDesigner, Walsh College
301 Kara DeFrias, Instructional Designer,New Jersey ManufacturersInsurance Group
302 Lake, Performance ImprovementManager, Louisiana Pacific Corp.
303 Jennifer Mahlmann, CustomerEducation Manager, Freddie Mac
304 Heinrich Koenen, Training Specialist,Progressive
305 Cindy Caltagirone, US Courts306 Nicholas Bird, Senior Analyst, RWD
Technologies Inc.307 Michael Thomas, Sr. Instructional
Designer, ALLTEL Communications,Inc.
308 Roger Steinhorst, Lead elearningspecialist, Fireman’s Fund
309 James Still, Specialist Consultant,EDS
310 Dawn Adams Miller, DevelopmentManager, Microsoft
834 Tips for Successful Online Instruction | 69
VII. Thanks to Our Tipsters continued
311 Debi Kostyun, Director, CorporateLearning Services
312 Gerry Wasiluk, Learning SolutionsManager, 3M
313 James Often, Webmaster, MTRGroup
314 Dr. Roberta Grossi, Horizons7315 Richard Ackerman, EDS316 Chantal Dupuis, Senior Learning
Technology Analyst, CBSA317 Evelyn Watson, A/Learning Design
Program Manager, Canada RevenueAgency
318 Stephen Champion, TrainingSpecialist, The Seattle Times
319 Gerald McClain, VP, eLearningInnovations
320 Ceil Tilney, Vice President, Linkage,Inc.
321 Tim McClutchy, eLearning Lead,GEHC Technologies IT
322 Sandra Johnsen, InstructionalDesigner, Univar USA Inc.
323 Clyde Bassett324 Larry Bograd, Director of Training,
Western Union325 Andrew Field, ICT coordinator,
Neale-Wade Community College
326 Helen Head, Mgr of VirtualLearning, Intellinex
327 Chris Willis, CEO, Media 1 Interactive,Inc.
328 Jennifer Evans, Quality Support &Training Specialist IV, Weber StateUniversity
329 Susie Wells, Technical Training, BCCSoftware
330 Pam Powell, Trainer, CreativeSolutions
331 Richie Jarvis, Online Instructor,AMX Corp.
332 Steven McDonald, Coordinator ofInstructional Technology &Technology Training, PennsylvaniaCollege of Technology
333 Keren Meister-Emerich, Developer &Trainer, Educational TechnologyTrainer
334 Don Wilson, Professor,Southwestern Oklahoma StateUniversity
335 Michelle Greear, Corporate TrainingManager, Technology Credit Union
336 Stephenie Bowen, TrainingConsultant, Roche Diagnostics
834 Tips for Successful Online Instruction | 70
VII. Thanks to Our Tipsters continued
The eLearning Guild is a Community of Practice for e-Learningdesign, development, and management professionals. Throughthis member driven community we provide high-quality learningopportunities, networking services,resources, and publications. Membersrepresent a diverse group of man-agers, directors, and executivesfocused on training and learning serv-ices, as well as e-Learning instruction-al designers, content developers,Web developers, project managers,contractors, and consultants. Guildmembers work in a variety of settingsincluding corporate, government, andacademic organizations.
Guild membership is an investment inyour professional development and inyour organization’s future successwith its e-Learning efforts. Your mem-bership provides you with learningopportunities and resources so thatyou can increase your knowledge andskills. That’s what the Guild is allabout ... putting the resources andinformation you need at your finger-tips so you can produce more suc-cessful e-Learning.
The eLearning Guild offers four levelsof membership. Each level providesmembers with benefits commensurate with your investment. In the table you
will find a comprehensive summary of benefits offered for eachmembership level. To learn more about Group Membership andpricing, go to www.eLearningGuild.com.
The eLearning Guild organizes a variety of important industry events...
A Worldwide Community of Practice for e-LearningProfessionals
Guild Benefits Associate
eLearning Insider
Annual Salary Survey
Past Conference Handouts
Resource Directory — Access & Post
Info Exchange — Access & Post
Job Board — Access Jobs & Resumes
Job Board — Post Resumes
Job Board — Post Jobs
Guild Research — Online Briefings
Guild Research — Reports
Guild Research — Archives
Learning Solutions e-Magazine
Online Events Archive
Online Forums
Online Symposiums
Face-to-Face Conferences
Pre-Conference Workshops
Event Fee Discounts
Online Event Site License Discounts
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